Class: Cars, Sedan — Model origin:
Minor action vehicle or used in only a short scene
Author | Message |
---|---|
◊ 2018-04-29 09:59 |
Giulia |
◊ 2018-05-05 09:37 |
Is there a reason why it doesn't have an H (Historisch) plate? |
◊ 2018-05-05 11:00 |
Of course you can find reasons: Most likely is that it´s a fake plate, if the car has not an approval or if the owner didn´t want to show the original plate. The second reason that comes to my mind now is that the car might not fit in with the engine or anything else with the historical model and therefore should not have an H-plate. -- Last edit: 2018-05-05 11:01:36 |
◊ 2018-05-05 12:34 |
The last point is extremely rare and the car in the garage doesn't look, that there would be a reason for it. No, the reason is, that in nearly all German TV- and movie production the vehicles -mainly loans by companies or private persons (there are websites, where you can register your car for that purpose)- got faked plates. About plates for historic cars the movie makers didn't think carefully abou the fact, that due the famous bullshittish German environment laws it's not legally possible to drive a historic car in bigger towns or metropolic regions without a H-plate. |
◊ 2018-05-05 12:36 |
P.S. The faked plates in "Cobra 11" and other productions of "Action Concept" are well known. There is a plate-maker, who produces these movie-platesand his own creation of the TÜV- and registration stickers. |
◊ 2018-05-05 12:55 |
What we can see here in the detail: Link to "www.flickr.com" |
◊ 2019-03-19 22:53 |
With this bootlid it isn't Nuova yet. |
◊ 2022-10-22 02:59 |
Yes, not a Nuova yet but last one before the Nuova. But not a Giulia TI either, you can see the letter "S" -->Super to the right after "Giulia" -plus a Giulia TI script would have different font. You can also make out the '72+ Super wheels. Can't id 1.3 or 1.6 from this angle but probably a 1.6 in Germany? If so: 1972 Giulia Super 1.6 [105.26] |