Thursday, October 17, 2013

How to Find VIN Numbers on an Engine Block

Your cars VIN number (Vehicle Identification Number) is a complex form of vehicle identification, as individual as a fingerprint. Starting with the model year 1981, all vehicle VIN numbers have been standardized. Every VIN number stamped into an engine block since 1981 has 17 letters and/or numbers, each letter and number conveying a different piece of information about your vehicle. VIN numbers are typically placed in several locations within each vehicle. One location is on the engine block itself. VIN numbers are stamped into an aluminum strip and riveted to the engine block at the assembly plant, when the engine is mounted onto a chassis.

Instructions

    1

    Open the hood of your vehicle and inspect the engine block. The engine block is the large metal jacket that covers your vehicles engine.

    2

    Spray the (warm) engine with engine de-greaser and allow the de-greaser to sit on the warm engine for approximately 10 minutes if the engine is so greasy that it may be obscuring the VIN number. Wipe the de-greaser off with one or more rags or brush the de-greaser off with a metal brush and then wipe with rags. The idea is to get the engine clean enough to see the VIN number.

    3

    Look for a 17-digit number (if your vehicle was manufactured in 1981 or later) either stamped directly into the metal of your cars engine block or (more commonly) stamped onto an aluminum plate or band and riveted to your cars engine block. The number is usually identified as a VIN number.

    4

    Check the front of the engine block first as this is the most common (but not only) place for vehicle engine VIN numbers to be located.

    5

    Inspect the drivers side of the engine block after inspecting the front of the block.The VIN can be located either above or below the level of the spark plugs. Use a magnifying glass to inspect hard-to-see places.

    6

    Search the passenger side of the engine block last as VIN numbers are rarely placed on this side of the block.

    7

    Compare the VIN number you find on the engine block with the VIN number on the drivers dash, just inside the windshield. These numbers should match unless the vehicles engine has been replaced.

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