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Motorized vehicles in Indonesia are required to have registration plates, which must be displayed both at the front and back of the vehicles.The issuing of number plates is regulated and administered by SAMSAT (Indonesian: Sistem Administrasi Manunggal Satu Atap, lit.
Pusat Pemeriksaan Kenderaan Berkomputer or Puspakom is a Malaysian computerized vehicle inspection company owned by DRB-HICOM. It was established in 1994. It was established in 1994. Puspakom is the main inspection center for commercial vehicles throughout Malaysia .
Typical three-numbered Brunei vehicle registration plate.. The most common form of Brunei vehicle registration plates, in use since the introduction of motorised vehicles in the country's British colonial era, typically begin with one or more letters, followed by up to four numerical digits with no leading zeroes.
A Kedah-registered Kereta Sewa number plate. Pre-1980s taxi number plates uses the same format as private vehicles based on the state of origin, but with the inversion of colours (black characters on white background). [19] This format is also complemented by a Kereta Sewa (English: Rental Car) tag on the roof of taxis.
Black on white (front) and black on yellow (rear) number plate scheme A white on black number plate scheme. In general, every motor vehicle in Singapore requires a vehicle registration number to be displayed at the front center (in almost all cases or otherwise set by car manufacturer due to bumper constraints) and rear of the vehicle. [1]
The second line of the license plate shows a six-digit registration number acting as a unique identifier for the vehicle. It consists of a two-digit number representing the registration series it was registered in, followed by a registration number from 0001 to 9999.
Police vehicle Type In service Notes Special vehicles/VIP vehicles Proton Waja: Sedan: 2000–present Patrol/pursuit, unmarked version used for VIP duties.
Domestically made air-conditioned cars produced by Industri Kereta Api (INKA) are no longer in service, although those trains will operate on Solo-Yogya Commuterline in Central Java. Trains are generally formed of 8, 10, or 12 cars, with a capacity of 80–110 passengers per car.