Let's face it, just like 99% of drivers, you most probably get in your motor vehicle each day without ever giving your windshield another thought. After all, it's hardy some art, a minimum of not until it crack or shatters. With cars designed the way they are nowadays, it truly does take a tremendous collision to shatter a car's windshield, but cracks are a different kettle of fish altogether.
Car thieves tamper while using VIN number of a stolen vehicle to be able to sell its parts, license it within a new identity, or get the vehicle from the country. A VIN can be changed in several ways, but the most-commonly used methods include removing in the part in the car where the VIN is found and replacing it with a new part, grinding, or changing one or multiple numbers or letters of the VIN. That is why, when buying a used car, always look at the places where a VIN is generally located, to check out signs that indicate it has been tampered with.
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