Appropriate registration numbers on cars...

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Gunk

Guru
Location
Oxford
As a vain, social climbing tw*t here are mine. (I’ve used photos of cars that have been long sold on)

507755


507756
 
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Slick

Guru
60 years ago my father bought a new Morris Traveller with a number plate 1 *** (I'm not giving details). They were not seen as special in those days and it just came with the car. He transferred it to every new car he got and when he died in 2008, he left me his car and number plate in his will. In those last 12 years, I have transferred it to the two new cars I have owned. I will leave it to my older son.

I am not a social climber. I am not a wafter. I do not have a legend and I don't think of myself as important. I do, however, have very fond memories of a special man who I miss every single day.
Perfect reason to have this which is exactly why I have mine and I still get a sense of satisfaction when I look at it.
 

Brandane

Legendary Member
Location
Costa Clyde
Perfect reason to have this which is exactly why I have mine and I still get a sense of satisfaction when I look at it.
I wish OWG414 had been retained through the years. It was the number on our family car, a Rover 110, when I was born.
Not that the letters or numbers have any meaning, but I feel it would be nice to still have it. Unfortunately it is long gone, and non retained numbers cannot be brought back.
 

Slick

Guru
I wish OWG414 had been retained through the years. It was the number on our family car, a Rover 110, when I was born.
Not that the letters or numbers have any meaning, but I feel it would be nice to still have it. Unfortunately it is long gone, and non retained numbers cannot be brought back.
I think we all need a connection to happier times with people who are no longer here and it would seem that number plates are able to do that for more people than just me. I have my dad's wedding ring, an ornament my mum loved and the number plate. I really don't believe that makes me a social climber at all.
 

Bazzer

Setting the controls for the heart of the sun.
I think we all need a connection to happier times with people who are no longer here and it would seem that number plates are able to do that for more people than just me. I have my dad's wedding ring, an ornament my mum loved and the number plate. I really don't believe that makes me a social climber at all.
^^^ +1 ^^^
I wish I had kept KOT385. Utterly meaningless to almost everyone except me. It was on Morris Traveller my Grandpa drove. My Dad had the car restored after my Grandpa died and after a few years circumstances overtook him and it was parked in a cold damp garage, never to move again until he died suddenly. Mum eventually agreed for me to have the car, when she moved out of the house, by which stage tin worm had destroyed the car. And with other stuff going on at the time it was only after I sent off the form to the DVLA about the car being scrapped I realised my mistake.:sad:
 

Gunk

Guru
Location
Oxford
It’s strange how you remember cars and registration numbers from when you were a kid, like others have said, happy times.

I remember our Morris Minor with ONH 321 and Renault 12 OVV 444J, both Northampton registrations.
 

CanucksTraveller

Macho Business Donkey Wrestler
Location
Hertfordshire
I really don't believe that makes me a social climber at all.

No, and I don't either.

My comment touched a nerve with some, clearly. But I did say there were exceptions, and if you had your plate from Dad and it has emotional connections, or if it was on your first car or similar, then I do of course get that kind of thought process. I think it's pretty plain that the social climber thing wasn't directed at your situation, or at the other poster who had similar reasons and also took offence.

It's people putting their initials on their 9 year old Range Rover in the belief that it makes them / the car have an air of prestige or status, that's what I'm referring to. And that is, I suspect the reason most people do it. Of course it may have done that in 1980 when they were rare, but not now.

Anyway I think we've managed to identify from the offended posts who actually has one. ^_^
 

screenman

Squire
No, and I don't either.

My comment touched a nerve with some, clearly. But I did say there were exceptions, and if you had your plate from Dad and it has emotional connections, or if it was on your first car or similar, then I do of course get that kind of thought process. I think it's pretty plain that the social climber thing wasn't directed at your situation, or at the other poster who had similar reasons and also took offence.

It's people putting their initials on their 9 year old Range Rover in the belief that it makes them / the car have an air of prestige or status, that's what I'm referring to. And that is, I suspect the reason most people do it. Of course it may have done that in 1980 when they were rare, but not now.

Anyway I think we've managed to identify from the offended posts who actually has one. ^_^

If you are thinking me you could not be more wrong, I have no interest in cars or the plates.
 

Slick

Guru
No, and I don't either.

My comment touched a nerve with some, clearly. But I did say there were exceptions, and if you had your plate from Dad and it has emotional connections, or if it was on your first car or similar, then I do of course get that kind of thought process. I think it's pretty plain that the social climber thing wasn't directed at your situation, or at the other poster who had similar reasons and also took offence.

It's people putting their initials on their 9 year old Range Rover in the belief that it makes them / the car have an air of prestige or status, that's what I'm referring to. And that is, I suspect the reason most people do it. Of course it may have done that in 1980 when they were rare, but not now.

Anyway I think we've managed to identify from the offended posts who actually has one. ^_^
I wasn't offended, just giving others an insight as to why they do things even if others can't make sense of it. No big deal
 
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