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This is the illustration shown in the assembly manual for the hazard warning **** for the '72 Supreme.
Note that it lists nothing about two separate ***** being used for the model year.
So, why does Fusick show these two in their catalog as being the correct ones depending on when during the model year the car was built?
411525 is the style I currently have. Is it possible they used three different ones?
As has been noted, it's possible they had 100 different styles.
People have to remember that, back when these cars were built, no one cared in the slightest about anyone 50 or 60 years later wondering if the "correct" parts were used when these cars were assembled. The goal was to get the cars built and out the door. No one cared in the slightest, I'm sure, that all of the hazard warning buttons matched. As long as there WAS a hazard warning button is all that mattered.
I'm always reminded of a story from some years ago, and I think I read it on this site, from a fellow who worked on the Olds assembly line when 442s were built back in the day. He was at a car show where two guys were looking in the trunk of a 442 and arguing over whether or not a particular bolt was correct. This fellow told a story of one time, near the end of a shift, they ran out of a particular bolt on the line. Someone was sent to the nearest hardware store to buy a couple of boxes of bolts in the correct size so they could finish the production run. These new bolts were not identical in appearance to the ones they had been using, but they fit and worked, and that's ALL that mattered. They had to get the cars built and out the door, and they did it however necessary. No one worried about anyone arguing over whether a particular bolt or any other part was exactly correct so that two guys wouldn't have to argue about it 50 years later. This story could probably be repeated many times for other minor parts on these cars.