1 - U.S. built
G - General Motors
8 - Chevrolet Suburban
G - 8001-9000 GVWR
C - 4x2
2 - 3/4 ton
6 - Suburban
W - 454 V8 4BBL RPO LE8
0 - Check Digit
B - 1981
F - Built in Flint, Mi.
148141 - 48,141st Chevrolet truck built at Flint in 1981
Once again, nicely done Retro.
I'm not trying to be a pedant but one slight correction -
148141 does not represent the 48,141 Chevrolet truck build in Flint in 1981.
It is merely a serial portion assigned when the VIN is established.
I say this because:
A) Trucks were not build in VIN order. They had the ability to be shuffled and/or banked between body build and paint, and again between paint and trim/final. This was to allow for more lengthy repairs if required, staging of bodies if parts were not immediately available due to an oversight, or work load leveling downstream (ie, can't build too many A/C jobs in a row; can't build too many manual trans in a row, can't have too many 4wd in a row, etc) and to allow the final line to keep running in the event of a breakdown in body or paint.
B) About one out of every nine trucks was a GMC; as you imply they had a separate VIN sequence, and those trucks were mixed in with the flow of Chevrolet nameplated vehicles
C) Flint had two assembly lines under the same roof. Line 2 built Suburbans and Blazers (two Suburbans followed by one Blazer) at a rate of 36 jobs per hour. Line 1 built pickup trucks at a rate of 60 vehicles per hour, and so by comparison was pumping out pickups twice as fast as utilities.
So - the serial portion has no meaning other than being assigned sequentially within the appropriate family of vehicles (and understanding that the sequence was not necessarily preserved throughout the build).
K