NASCAR trucks have very little in common with actual pickups. The former are tube-framed race cars, ones with proportions designed to match late 1990s street trucks rather than the half-ton muscle trucks playing the part of road-focused performance pickups today. Add in the stickers where headlights go, and you might think that it would be easy to spot one on the road, where a tube-framed race truck would not belong without serious work. Somehow, though, one slipped through the cracks in Pennsylvania.According to Pennsylvania State Police and brought to broader attention by WHTM ABC News 27, a man in the Keystone State is facing charges for passing off a NASCAR racing truck entered in a 2023 race as a 1999 Chevrolet S10. Police say that he purchased the former racing truck and installed an unrelated VIN from an actual S10 in order to title it and advertise it for sale as a street-legal pickup.A Carlisle Auctions listing shows the VIN in question, 1GCCS1444X8130451, on the race truck. As you might expect, that number is linked to a four-cylinder 1999 Chevrolet S10 that shares almost nothing in common with the V-8 racer. Road-going conversion work seems to have been limited to LED headlights, tail lights, and turn signals, plus a horn. Otherwise, this appears to just be a former NASCAR racer with a VIN riveted on.a racing truck parked outside a building While such conversions are not impossible, they generally have to be done by a specialized company that has the ability to assign a legal VIN to the former racer in question. Without that number, the converter who skips that step runs the risk of someone looking up whichever VIN was placed on the car and asking how exactly the number got there. This particular alleged truck seller was charged with nine different crimes, ranging from fraud to tampering with public records.