We'd need to know the country and/or state/province (if applicable) in order to be able to answer this question.
In 1952, the designation or code letter on a Georgia license plate for a pickup truck was A/p.
No. you have to have them both on the car or truck.
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The Creeper drives an old truck with a license plate that reads BEATNGU, which is first interpreted as "beating you," but later read as "be eating you"
You can gain access from behind the bumper.
A regular car/truck plate measures 6" x 12". Motorcycle plastes are 4" x 7"
no you can be charged with fictious plates
That depends on the state. For example, in California, that may be possible, but in Texas it is not.
Easiest way is to connect a single wire from one of your rear taillights "parking light" to the wire on license plate light. It gets its ground from the bumper once installed.
Both plates are required on all cars and trucks in Wisconsin.
In most states, the number itself tells those who need to know what kind of license it is. In California, most cars and trucks have a digit, three letters and three more digits. A commercial truck plate has a letter followed by six digits, and there are other combinations for big trucks, trailers, and other categories.
It varies. U-Haul trucks aren't all registered in one state, so what the plate says is dependent on the state (or province, in the case of trucks registered in Canada) prints on their plates.