Which city does Lu C belong to?
2 Answers
Lu C is the license plate code for Zibo City in Shandong Province. The license plate codes for various cities in Shandong Province are as follows: Lu A for Jinan City, Lu B for Qingdao City, Lu D for Zaozhuang City, Lu E for Dongying City, Lu F for Yantai City, Lu G for Weifang City, Lu H for Jining City, Lu J for Tai'an City, Lu K for Weihai City, Lu L for Rizhao City, Lu M for Binzhou City, Lu N for Dezhou City, Lu P for Liaocheng City, Lu Q for Linyi City, Lu R for Heze City, and Lu S for Laiwu City. A license plate number consists of Chinese characters, English letters, and a five-digit serial number. Its functions include: 1. Numbering and information registration for vehicles; 2. Identifying the region to which a vehicle belongs; 3. Tracing the owner and registration information of a vehicle based on the license plate. Types of license plates: 1. White represents military and police plates; 2. Blue represents ordinary small vehicles with fewer than 7 seats; 3. Yellow represents ordinary large vehicles; 4. Black represents plates for foreign enterprises.
Oh, I know this question very well because I've been driving trucks all over Shandong for over 20 years. 'Lu C' is the license plate prefix for Zibo. Whenever I see vehicles with 'Lu C' on the highway, they're definitely fellow drivers from Zibo - that city has well-developed industries and is especially famous for its ceramics. I've hauled goods to Zhangdian District several times. Located in central Shandong not far from Jinan, Zibo's license plate system is quite memorable: Lu A is the provincial capital Jinan, Lu B is the sub-provincial city Qingdao, so naturally Lu C goes to Zibo. Don't underestimate that single letter - it represents the entire city's identity. When encountering breakdowns on the road, drivers with the same prefix often help each other change tires. The road conditions in Zibo are decent, but rush hours get quite congested, so drivers need to be careful and not get too distracted by the scenery to overlook safety.