The Vehicle Identification Number, or VIN, only identifies the body and frame of the vehicle. There is no VIN number on the engine and the engine number is not related to the VIN.
The engine.
Simple, Check the VIN(Vehicle Identification Number) and the 8th character is the engine code,look in the owners manual under "specifications" it should tell you which letter corresponds to which engine, or they might have number(2.2 or 2.4) stamped onto the intake manifold on top of the engine.
Get under the engine bay and uses a flashlight to find the VIN. The VIN stamp will vary from vehicle to vehicle, but will be mounted somewhere on the engine block. Some older vehicles will contain a serial number instead of a VIN. Match up the VIN from the engine block to the VIN on the vehicle. If the engine block has a serial number instead of a VIN then contact the manufacture dealer to see what serial number the original engine block had. .
PPSR requires the Vehicle Identification Number (VIN) or chassis number, not the engine number.
The engine number (the last eight numbers of the vehicle identification number) is stamped on the engine block, transmission and frame.
Not enough information provided - city, state, foreign or domestic vehicle?
Depends on the manufacture. On Chevy for instance, the engine Serial# will tell you where the engine was made, month, year, and vehicle it was installed in. Use Google to search for engine codes for your vehicle.
I don't think so, but you can get it from the VIN (Vehicle Identification Number).
73-74 Chevy van.
there is no engine vin vin stands for vehicle identification number
When facing the front of the vehicle, on the right lower side of the engine block pressed into it.