Okay my 75 Grabber has a build date of 6/24/75 Kansas City built it has cat convertor new style steering wheel frosted cross hair lights 100mph speedo dura spark three speed on the floor front discs no seat belt interlock heavy duty suspension dual inlet front bumper Ford letters on trunk only Hope this helps Mike
Thanks Mike! Good stuff. What jumps out at me on yours is the letters only on the trunk. Wonder if that was a KC thing? With the later build date, the cat, steering wheel, lack of interlock all seem in place. I just wonder about the speedo thing again... other than the hood letters of course.
They didn't make them in Buffalo, if the second digit in the serial number is an "X" it's from St.Thomas shipped through Buffalo.
i think the 100mph speedo was for the grabber, the rest is similar to my 75, same month build date, but mine is St. Thomas
but why are some amber and some are clear??? this is the question thats been buggin me maybe its a early75 vs a late75 difference???
Maybe they didn't put the F O R D on the hood on Grabbers... Maybe it clashed with the Grabber hood treatment?
I dunno. That bugs me too. But didn't Tim say that his early car had amber frosted? If so, it doesn't fit because my car has clear frosted. What did your's have again, Eddie?
You never know. The way an assembly line works, while the regular hoods were getting their letters, maybe the Grabbers were getting their striping... Then when the work was done, they put the hoods all back on the assembly line, rather than send the Grabbers back to lettering. Or The lettering could have interfered with the tools or machines used to install the striping.
Okay, let's think about this. State laws about lights vary some. Not much, but some. That is why some 67-68 Shelbys have inboard high beams while others destined for certain states had outboard high beams. The car was designed with the high beams inboard. However, it the car was being shipped to a state that didn't allow it, they had to fit the car with outboards. I know this is a sorta extreme example, but it might fit. If the car was intended for a certain district, maybe it got ambers. They seem less plentiful to me. I might stand to reason that some states didn't allow amber bulbs in clear housings. Maybe they required the housings actually be amber, so when the bulb was replaced, it would still be amber. We all know you can put a clear bulb in a clear housing, and it technically is no longer legal in most places. If a state required amber lenses, it would stop any chance of such mismatching of parts.
Is it just me, or do the turn signals in the outboard Shelby look amber? The ones on the inboard car are clear, no question.