Roadguy spent a good chunk of this past week thinking about license plates. It all started with a question from alert reader Brian, who perhaps contemplates the plates in front of him whenever he's stuck in traffic:
What determines when Minnesota stops issuing license plates in the current ABC 123 format and switches to 123 ABC? The state has been alternating between those two schemes for ages, but there has never been any apparent rhyme or reason as to when they switch.
In fact, plates issued have never actually reached the end of the alphabet; the fact that we're now seeing plates starting with X is downright surprising, considering previous passes through the alphabet have always ended several letters earlier....
Brian is not entirely alone in his interest in this topic. A few months ago, Roadguy heard from alert reader Jay, who spotted an "X" plate and wondered why the state had skipped W. Then there was the friend of Roadguy who wondered why plates must be replaced every seven years regardless of condition.
Roadguy clearly needed to get up to speed on license plates, so he called up our friends at the Department of Public Safety, and here's what he learned.
Alphabetically speaking
First, the letters-numbers thing: State officials say it takes about a decade to go through the letters-first series before they switch to the numbers-first format. But sometimes there are interruptions:
About 1996 we changed from steel to aluminum plates, and we started over with ABC at that time to distinguish between the types of plates.