Dr.Jass
Pastor of Muppets
Those of you who've been around for a while will remember these. I used to make two-sided VIN decoder cards that were laminated and about the size of a credit card. One side was 1968/1969 VINs, the other was 1970 through 1974. I actually used to sell them on eBay years back and sold hundreds of them. They're pretty handy for car shows, junkyards, looking at a new project, or just checking something you saw in someone's back field. I would bet a couple of board members still have theirs from years ago. These go back to the ScatPack.com era, they've been around so long. Speaking of which, does anyone actually still have an original ScatPack-logo card? I never kept a single one of these for myself. :doh:
I stumbled across the artwork looking for something else. I was thinking about running a new batch of them, if there's sufficient interest.
This is what I'm talking about. This is the original version with the ScatPack.com logo from years ago; I still have the artwork for those I sold on eBay as well as the later version with a Moparnuts web address which is slightly different. Obviously, the finished product is far more legible than these shrunken images.


Please respond to this thread if you're interested in one! I need to get an idea of whether it's worth my time to run off several of these since I'll need supplies. The higher the demand, the lower the price... it's as simple as that.
I stumbled across the artwork looking for something else. I was thinking about running a new batch of them, if there's sufficient interest.
This is what I'm talking about. This is the original version with the ScatPack.com logo from years ago; I still have the artwork for those I sold on eBay as well as the later version with a Moparnuts web address which is slightly different. Obviously, the finished product is far more legible than these shrunken images.


Please respond to this thread if you're interested in one! I need to get an idea of whether it's worth my time to run off several of these since I'll need supplies. The higher the demand, the lower the price... it's as simple as that.