When my 2010 Transit died and I bought a 2015 Transit the dealer took care of it. The best bet is to visit your county DMV and inquire. JUST IN CASE Bring your amateur radio license AC0TX
On Sat, May 14, 2016 at 4:48 PM, Jon Noxon via BVARC <[email protected]> wrote: > Take the registration for the new vehicle and a copy of your ham license > to the dmv in your county, take a ticket, and wait you turn. You will get a > new window sticker with your vin and call sign (and order new plates if you > need them). > > Pretty painless, and implies you have a transceiver installed in the new > car truck or what ever. You can actually get your call plates for up to > three vehicles! > > Kf5tfj. jon > > Sent from my iPad > > > On May 14, 2016, at 4:34 PM, Michael Rapp via BVARC <[email protected]> > wrote: > > > > Hi all, > > > > I am certain someone can help me with this. After 175,000 miles, my > CR-V has become untenable to drive. I've enjoyed having my amateur radio > license plates on it since I was licensed. > > > > My Google-fu is failing me today and I am unclear of the proper process > in Texas to transfer amateur radio license plates to a new vehicle. Is it > as simple as removing them from the old vehicle during the trade-in process > and affixing them to the new car? Clearly there needs to be a way to get > them associated to the new VIN. > > > > How does this work? > > > > 73, > > -- > > /*/-=[Michael / KT5MR]-=/*/ > > _______________________________________________ > > BVARC mailing list > > [email protected] > > http://mail.bvarc.org/mailman/listinfo/bvarc_bvarc.org > > _______________________________________________ > BVARC mailing list > [email protected] > http://mail.bvarc.org/mailman/listinfo/bvarc_bvarc.org >
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