It has one of the funny US-made wannabe-German-plates
With such a 32B-Passat
http://www.imcdb.org/vehicle_539947-Volkswagen-Passat-Typ-32B-1981.html
I even drove "VDO"
As on this pic visible:
http://passaratti.fusseltuning.de/5ender/2005_05_15/153-5380_IMG.jpg
Same speedo for the basic version, up to 200 km/h and without rev.counter.
It was my dad's car, a 1981 LS with the 1.6 liter-75 hp-engine, the manual 4-speed-gearbox, 165-tires and without catalytic converter.
The older it was, the faster it goes. The first time I was really shocked, when I drove full throttle down an Autobahn-hill and noticed the speedo-needle on the 190 km/h-bar
The offical max.speed is 164 km/h.
Of course I tried to get more every time I drove that car - and I was successful. Of course it was no real 220 km/h, but close to 200 km/h it was anyways.
With over 200.000 km on the clock, the Passat started to burn oil. I liked that, because there was a perfect trick to get rid of tailgaters (a serious problem on every German Autobahn:
Driving full throttle, at best downwards a hill, let the Bimmer or Benz coming closer, lifting up the gas pedal jerkingly, let the car roll for 1-2 seconds - and then make also jerkingly a kickdown: I couldn't see the car behind me any more, so thick was the blue cloud whiffing out of the exhaust
Years later I had an own 32B-Passat, a 1987 Variant GT as
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/38/VW_Passat_rear_20080304.jpg
(1.8 liter, 90 hp, manual 5-speed-gearbox, catalytic converter and 195-tires). There VDO-driving was not possible any more, even after we had emptied the catalysator.