Has It Been 30 Years Already?

Feb. 25, 2009
Vehicle Identification Numbers will reset this year--here's how to decode the new system

If you haven't noticed already, you will soon: Vehicle Identification Number (VIN) requirements are changing to provide more information about automobiles and light-duty trucks in their codes.

VINs are a bit like Social Security numbers--each vehicle has its own unique identification, and used properly, you can get a lot of information from it. But with manufacturers building more than 60 million vehicles a year, those numbers have slowly but surely begun to run out, leaving industry experts to figure out a solution to avoid number duplication, which could lead to some serious confusion.

A 1980 federal law states that, "The VINs of any two vehicles manufactured within a 30-year period shall not be identical."

According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), that period was expected to expire in 2010 and "would adversely impact the many organizations that maintain an orderly system for identifying and tracking vehicles."

ACCELERATING CHANGE

The story actually begins way back in 1954, when the first VINs started to appear as a way of identifying and describing individual vehicles produced by a manufacturer. From the start, VINs had a public safety value, as they were intended to deter vehicle theft, and allow for more accurate and efficient manufacturer recalls. But, according to NHTSA, there was no industry-wide system in place at the time, and so early VINs came in a confusing variety of configurations.

That chaos came to an end in 1969, when Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard (FMVSS) No. 115 took effect. According NHTSA's final rule document for the current revision, the original standard "required each passenger car to have a VIN that is permanently ‘sunk or embossed' on a part of the vehicle visible through the glazing by a person standing at the left windshield pillar. Manufacturers were required to avoid having a VIN be repeated within a 10-year period."

Believe it or not, it was Volkswagen of America, along with the Motor Vehicle Manufacturers Association, who, with NHTSA, brought about the current 17-character system. The idea was to create "an even more structured and standardized system of VINs as well as expanding the system to additional classes of vehicles," according to NHTSA.

That rule kicked in at the start of the 1981 model year, and has been with us ever since.

Y2K TAKE 2?

But with the sun about to set on that old rule, NHTSA had to act to ensure that there wouldn't be a car and truck rolling off an assembly line in 2009 with a VIN that matched that of, say, a 1981 Volkswagen. NHTSA spokesperson Ray Tyson says it is difficult to predict what troubles may have been caused by duplicate VINs, but no one in the industry wanted to find out.

"It's like running out of anything; it's something you don't want to have happen and we anticipated it and the manufacturers' anticipated it before it got to that point," he says. "You can't (duplicate numbers). You can't ever assume that simply because a number may be old that it isn't still in service. This modifies the vehicle identification number to the extent that we're guaranteed we'll have an adequate supply of vehicle identification numbers for the next 30 years."

The warning about the dwindling availability of numbers was first sounded several years ago by the Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE) International, which formed a committee to address the issue earlier this decade, and in 2005 issued a petition regarding concerns about the available supply of VINs; in particular the manufacturer identification part.

The matter first appeared in the public arena back in 2004, when several articles were written about the SAE's attempts to solve the problem. Many options were considered, but one choice SAE did not recommend was creating longer VINs--enough to hold 18 or 19 character codes that would not repeat for 100 years or so.

At the time, committee chairman Dave Proefke, a GM technical engineer, said longer codes would force a major overhaul of computer systems across the industry that would be much more costly and challenging than the situation caused by the Y2K computer scare. He said the change would cost tens of millions of dollars for smaller manufacturers, and larger manufacturers like GM would have to make significant changes to assembly plants, and engineering and processing centers.

17 CHARACTERS

Thankfully, like the Y2K doomsday scenario that never happened, manufacturers will not have to worry about spending hundreds of thousands of dollars--if not more--changing all their machines to add more spots for numerals.

By modifying the current 17-character system, NHTSA achieved two goals, according to the Federal docket:

"First, the need to issue new manufacturer identifiers, particularly for large manufacturers, should be drastically reduced, thus preserving for a longer period of time the remaining combinations of characters that are available to be issued. Second, the changes will substantially increase the number of combinations of characters available in positions 4 through 8 of the VIN, as well as combinations of those characters with characters in the other VIN positions, so that the number of available VINs will significantly increase, enabling the current 17-character system to continue for another 30 years and possibly longer."

FINAL RULE

This past April, NHTSA published its final rule, amending VIN requirements (in 49 CFR Part 565) for passenger cars, multipurpose passenger vehicles and trucks with a gross vehicle weight rating (GVWR) of 10,000 lbs. or less "so that the system will remain viable for at least another 30 years."

The rule change applies to all motor vehicles manufactured on or after October 27, 2008, whose VINs have an "A" or "B" in the 10th position of the VIN, and all motor vehicles manufactured on or after April 30, 2009.

What will change? Vehicle OEMs will observe the following:
• Vehicle "make" will no longer be required to be identified in the manufacturer identifier of the VIN.
• Vehicle "make" will now need to be identified, along with other information items included in the previous version of Part 565, in the second section of the VIN, which consists of VIN positions 4 through 8.
• In generating VINs for vehicles that comply with Part 565, manufacturers of passenger cars and multipurpose passenger vehicles and trucks with a gross vehicle weight rating of 4536 kg. (10,000 lbs.) or less will have an expanded number of characters available in positions 4, 5, and 6 of the VIN. All three of these positions may now be either numeric or alphabetic.

These manufacturers will also be required to use an alphabetic character in position 7 of the VIN.

The final rule clearly states that "NHTSA believes that this rule will have a beneficial effect on safety in that it ensures the continued integrity of the VIN system (ensuring that vehicles will continue to be uniquely identified)."

In other words, there shouldn't be any mix-ups or missed messages come recall time, and vehicle histories will be as reliable, if not moreso, than they already are.

Sponsored Recommendations

Report: The 2024-2025 State Of Heavy-Duty Repair

Fullbay's fifth annual State of Heavy-Duty Repair compiles insights from almost 1,000 experts and over 3,500 shops. If you aren't leveraging these proven data points, your competition...

Ask the Experts: Boost Profitability by Capturing Body Repair Materials Billables

Quality body repairs on medium- and heavy-duty trucks depend on the use of specialized adhesives, sealers, and other allied materials. Unfortunately, many shops face challenges...

Fleet Maintenance E-Book

Streamline your fleet's maintenance and improve operations with the Guide for Managing Maintenance. Learn proven strategies to reduce downtime, optimize in-house and third-party...

Celebrating Your Drivers Can Prove to be Rewarding For Your Business

Learn how to jumpstart your driver retention efforts by celebrating your drivers with a thoughtful, uniform-led benefits program by Red Kap®. Uniforms that offer greater comfort...