janobuye, thanks for the pictures! Your pictures from an unrestored car help to confirm how the Fisher Body vs. Chevrolet side of the Norwood assembly operations, assigned sequence numbers on components. You have a “10” on your rim, which was installed on the Chevrolet side, and a “10” on your fuel tank. Do you happen to have a “10” marked anywhere on your firewall? I need to carefully read the assembly process report again to determine when/who installed the fuel tank, Fisher Body or Chevrolet. I had “63” marked on my fuel tank and heater core box, so I assumed Fisher Body installed both.
dannystarr had a common sequence number marked on his fire wall (thus by Fisher Body) and on the lower valance panel of the front sheet metal subassembly, which would have been marked by Chevrolet. That tells us Fisher Body and Chevrolet shared sequence number information. This shared info may have been driven by the body broadcast sheet taped to the body when it passed thru the wall to Chevrolet. We know the sequence number was not related to the Fisher Body number embossed on the body tag.
I believe I read or heard that bodies released from the body bank were marked 001 thru XXX each day. It was a simple number assembly line workers could quickly see and related which component parts to pull for that body. However, this is only an educated guess on my part. I have worked my entire career as a manufacturing engineer, and for the past 20+ years in automotive powertrain operations. Today pallets with smart RFID read/write tags can receive info (sequence numbers, etc.), and readers can release palleted subassemblies to the right place at the right time along the assembly line. 30-50 years ago, long before smart RFID, bar codes, etc., simple sequence numbers and the broadcast sheets attached the Fisher Body and Chevrolet car assembly where key to direct the assembly line work. The assembly line process report notes at the end of the Chevrolet assembly line, operators de-papered the broadcast sheets from the car and tossed them.
Wish my Camaro happened to be one of the cars that those folks stuffed all those broadcast sheets under my seat! LOL!