Fleetwood Mobile Home Serial Number Location
All makers place the model number physically on the body of the motor home, usually somewhere near the driver's seat. For example, Fleetwood places the model number on a silver sticker on the exterior driver sidewall, near the entry door, as well as on the capacity chart on the inside of the closet door. This is for the chassis only, and the last 6 numbers are the what you will refer to when talking to your chassis maker. You will also have a FIN which is the Fleetwood Identification Number. You will also have a serial number for the engine. Mine is a sticker on the oil pan.
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“Who made this mobile home? And how old is it?” These are the first questions we get asked at manufactured home inspections. The Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) requires that a manufacturer place a large information sticker, called a “data plate,” on the interior of every mobile home—and that’s where you find out. The data plate provides a tremendous amount of useful info in a standardized format.
It will be located on the wall of the master bedroom closet, at the electric panel, or the inside of a kitchen cabinet door-often one of the doors under the sink. The key items you want to locate on the data plate are.1) The name of the manufacturer and address of the manufacturing plant where it was made. If you are not familiar with the reputation of the manufacturer of the home you are considering buying, we suggest getting a copy of The Grissim Ratings Guide to Manufactured Homes (John Grissim, Rainshadow Publications, 2007, $29.95, ).
The book is updated every few years and your local library will likely have a copy. The guide covers all major manufacturers and includes a brief history of the company, price range of their homes, rating of construction quality, and description of the company’s most popular model lines. While it is intended as a guide for buyers of new manufactured homes, the information is equally valuable for evaluating a pre-owned home. Mobile home manufacturing rides a roller-coaster between boom and bust every 15 years or so, with a cluster of companies leaving the industry on the downside of each cycle, so the brand of a 20-year old mobile home you’re considering may not by be in the current Grissim Ratings because the company is defunct.2) The date of manufacture. If the mobile home was built before June 1976, there were no baseline HUD-requirements and the home will not have a data plate.
The year of manufacture is important, because construction standards were strengthened over the years, especially after certain key dates. The construction standards of different manufacturers of pre-HUD Code homes varied—sometimes dramatically. Then, between June 1976 (beginning of HUD Code) and July 1994 all mobile homes were required to meet a single minimum standard regardless of where they were intended to be located. While these homes, especially the double-wide units, are typically sturdier than pre-1976 homes, they are not nearly as storm-resistant as homes built to Zone II and Zone III standards after July 1994.3) A listing of the certification label numbers (also called HUD tag numbers) affixed to each transportable section of the home. One number for a single-wide, two for a double-wide, and so forth.4) The manufacturer’s serial number and model designation of the home. In some versions of the data plate, the model designation is in a separate box.5) A list of the factory-installed equipment, including the manufacturer’s name and model number. Comparing this list with the refrigerator, range, water heater, and other currently installed appliances in the home will tell you whether they are original to the construction or newer.6) A check-box for the “roof load zone” in which the home was designed to be located.
Northern roof load zones are meant to allow for a snow load. Compare the roof load zone checked with the adjacent small U.S.
Fleetwood Manufactured Homes Serial Number
Map to confirm that the home meets the standards for where it is located.7) A check-box for the “wind load zone” in which the home was designed to be located. Zones are I, II, and III—with II and III zones constructed to withstand different levels of hurricane-force winds inland from the coast. Here too, compare the wind load zone checked with the adjacent map to verify proper construction for the location.8) Heating and cooling data and “thermal map,” which shows the zone the home was designed to be located in, along with a calculation of the level of heat transmission of the building envelope. Sometimes this is a separate plate. Because most homes in our area do not have factory-installed heating or cooling, the manufacturer’s recommendation for the BTU-size of the package air conditioner is noted.
A home designed for a higher thermal zone number can be located in a lower zone, but not vice-versa.We sometimes encounter older, remodeled mobile homes where the data plate has been painted over or removed. So you may not find one.But there’s still hope: if you can locate either the HUD certification number or the serial number, then you can obtain the original data plate info from the Institute for Business Technology and Safety, a HUD contractor that maintains a database back to 1976 of HUD-code manufactured homes. There’s a fee of $100 for a replacement data plate by email or fax. Here’s a link to their web-page for the service:The HUD certification number is etched into a 2” by 4” metal plate (called the “HUD tag”) riveted to the exterior wall of each section of a mobile on the long side at a corner near the bottom. There’s a picture of one below.
It starts off life bright red, but will likely be faded when you find it. If even the HUD tag is gone, crawl under the home with a flashlight and look for the serial number on the forward cross-member of the steel I-beam frame. It is required by HUD to stamped into the metal by the manufacturer in letters a minimum of 3/8” high.And, finally, the local property appraiser’s office will have basic info about the mobile home that they acquired for real estate tax purposes which can be accessed via a public records search of their website; or, if paperwork for the original home financing turns up, it will contain helpful information.
MANUFACTURER / TRADE NAME
Located on the HUD Data Plate/Compliance Certificate located inside of home.
Located on the Name Plate/Logo attached to the exterior front or entry door side of home.
YEAR OF MANUFACTURE (Not the Model Year )
Located on the HUD Data Plate/Compliance Certificate located inside of home.
Located ona date stamp found inside the water tank of a bath toilet. ( This method can be used to estimate the year home was built)
SIZE OF HOME
A single-wide listed as a 18 x 80 ( i.e. Call Size ) may actually be 16 x 77 , with a 3 hitch assembly and 1 roof eaves on either side.
You can measure the width and length of the structure along the exterior perimeter at the floor level ( i.e. Floor Size ).
Do not include the hitch or roof eaves in this measurement.
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HUD CODE
The HUD Title 6 Construction Standards Regulation is a Performance Code effective on June 15, 1976. All manufactured homes built on or after the above date must be designed to comply with standards as evidenced by a red metal label located on the outside of each unit/floor. These standards are administered by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), Washington DC, through a network of state agencies (SAA s) and independent 3rd party professional engineering firms (PE s).
This code supersedes all local and state building codes. A HUD coded manufactured home structure can be offered for sale in any state. The removal of its HUD label(s), wheels, axles or frame will not qualify the structure as a modular home or real property. The removal of its HUD label(s) or frame is illegal as per the HUD Title 6 Regulations.
HUD CONSTRUCTION CODE LABEL LOCATION
This metal certification label (red in color with silver lettering) is permanently attached to the rear exterior siding of each transportable section per HUD Title VI Regulations effective 6/15/76.
Missing Construction Code Label
HUD does not offer replacement labels from their offices. However, upon request from an interested party, the national monitoring contractor, Institute for Building Technology and Safety (IBTS), will review their records and indicate that, at the time of manufacture the home was issued a HUD label number(s). The interested party has the option to use this information in any manner they wish. This applies to homes manufactured from June 15, 1976 and newer only.
The serial number for each floor section is required for request.
You may need the label for:

Loans
Sale
Insurance
Relocation
Appraisal
Utility Connections
Zoning Inspections
IBTS
505 Huntmar Park Drive
Suite 250
Herndon, VA 20170
(703) 481-2010
http://www.ibts.org
MODULAR CODE
Modular homes are built to the International Residential Code (also known as the IRC), for one- and two-family dwellings and townhouses. (With one exception, Wisconsin wrote their own state code for dwellings)
Commercial (non-dwelling) buildings, including modular's, must be built to the International Building Code, (also known as the IBC); used in all fifty states.
There is no such code as the 'National Uniform Code'. Never has been. The UBC stands for 'Uniform Building Code', and is not used anywhere in the US any more. Perhaps you were thinking of the code bodies that existed prior to the origination of the IBC. The three major organizations consisted of the BOCA National Building Code (published by the Building Officials and Code Administrators), and mostly adopted in the Midwest and eastern states; the UBC or Uniform Building Code, adopted mostly in the western states; and the Southern Building Code or SBCCI (for Southern Building Code Congress International) which was used primarily in the southern states. These three code bodies combined and formed the current International Code Council, which is used exclusively throughout the United States.
You state that the building code is 'specification code'. This is incorrect. Both the IRC & IBC are known as 'prescriptive' codes, that is they detail exactly how something is to be done. Codes which are not prescriptive are known as 'performance' codes. A Performance Code will set objectives as to what is to be achieved and its up to the designer as how to achieve the end result.
A good example would be to compare the use of Braced Walls from section 602.10 of the IRC, in which the exact method of how to build the home to resist both wind and seismic forces is detailed, compared to Section 301.1.1, which references the IBC and one of three other standards which sets out the end result and allows the designer the ability to decide how to achieve that result.
MODULAR CODE LABEL LOCATION
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Modular labels are sometimes attached under the kitchen sink. Modular type units WILL NOT have the red HUD label attached on the rear exterior siding. Some manufacturers will also use the HUD data plate form, but it will list the STATE S MODULAR CODE in place of the DAPIA CODE.
Most states will require the use of a state label, and are normally located at the electrical panel, under the kitchen sink or inside a bedroom closet. Many states require a separate label on each module of a home. The information on the data plate is specified by state regulations and is usually located at the same location as the state label. In addition, several states require a Third-Party Inspection agency label also be attached to the home along with the state label.
SERIAL I.D. NUMBER LOCATION
The location of the serial number is specified in section 3280.6. It is prohibited to be stamped into the hitch (removable). Specifically it reads 'Numbers must not be stamped into hitch assembly or drawbar.'
The federal standards require the serial number to be stamped into the front cross-member; and is always located directly opposite the point where one of the main rail's attach to the back side of that crossmenber. (The reason being, when you stamp a number into a flexible steel frame part it tends to bounce, causing a weak and sometimes double stamp. The floor crew will always use the location reference because it's much more rigid and provides a better place to stamp the letters and numbers.
As there is no frame under a modular, the only place one can find a serial number is on the home's data plate
HUD DATA PLATE LOCATION
Not quite correct. Section 3280.5 reads 'Each manufactured home shall bear a data plate affixed in a permanent manner near the main electrical panel or other readily accessible and visible location.' A HUD guideline requires that if the data plate is not located at the panelbox, that a label be placed referencing its actual location.
No size is specified and it can be of any size. The information on it must be permanent in nature and sealed with a plastic sheet (if paper) to prevent erasure or destruction of information.
It very important that an agent look for the data plate (and certification labels) before signing any paperwork, because if either is missing, it can take weeks and a couple of hundred to replace. (I get calls several times a years asking for assistance in locating a replacement certification label, data plate or just where to find a serial number of an older manufactured home. Without a data plate, it become (in many cases) impossible as the foundation now blocks the front cross member.
The information actually required to be included on the data plate, is:
Name & address of the manufacturing plant where home was manufactured (many corporations have several plants in different states).
Serial number, model designation and date manufactured,
Specific wordings,
List of the certification label attached to each section,
List of factory-installed major appliances,
Reference to the roof-load zone, and wind-zone maps, andThe name of the DAPIA (Design Approval, Primary Inspection Agency, the agency which approved the design).