OMG Stan. Have you never read a post from someone who bought a Speedster registered as a Special Construction and ran into big problems getting it registered in their state?
We've talked about this before, and I debated for a full day whether or not to take the bait.
I think I will.
Yes, there are guys who can't get their cars registered, and I feel badly for them, but I always go away with the feeling that anything is possible if a guy is willing to escalate the issue
Every time this comes up, you make it sound like a tube-frame car is more likely to experience this as an issue, when this just isn't the case. Generally, the problem arises when a properly titled car is brought in from another state-- it doesn't make a bit of difference whether the car is pan or tube framed, it's the title that the new state doesn't recognize that is the issue. We probably both agree on that.
I'll also agree that there's almost never an issue with a VW title sailing right through whatever state it gets submitted to. However, where we part ways is that I know that registering in this way is not legal in any state. I know everybody does it, and I know that nobody we know of has had an issue. That doesn't make it legal. We can all huff and puff and talk about how somebody somewhere once said that it was OK-- but even a cursory reading of the laws regarding special construction vehicles shows that our cars fit the bill. VIN numbers follow the body, not the frame. If registering a Vintage Speedster as a VW is legal, then I suppose registering a Beck or IM that way would be as well. None of them are.
I have as much disrespect for stupid laws as the next guy, and I'd happily risk the ticket... if that was all that was at stake. But I've always wondered what happens in a situation of extreme liability when driving a car titled as a VW that has clearly been altered to the point that it fits the very definition of a "special construction" vehicle. Let's say a kid darts out in the road, and the driver of a pan-based speedster titled as a VW hits and kills him. I've dealt with insurance adjusters a lot over the past 36 months. If somebody is killed or maimed, I'm guessing that the insurance company is going to be looking for any and every reason to avoid a multi-million dollar claim. I can easily see State Farm or Grundy or Haggarty looking at the car and saying, "that's no VW", and not honoring the policy. I can also see them counter-suing for fraud. What happens when the cops come to the same conclusion? I can afford to lose my car, but I can't afford to lose everything I've ever worked for.
... especially when there's a way to get this done legally in almost every state in the union. Illinois is ridiculously easy. The OP is from Illinois. There's ZERO reason why he should avoid a tube-framed car.