Well, I was looking at the 428CJ site here:
http://www.428cobrajet.org/id-fan-clutchAnd saw, near the bottom, where they speculate the ink stamp is date related.
Now, if I use my Chevy/Corvette "spring type" Eaton fan clutch knowledge from '67-'68 (which look just like my '67 GT 390), had date stamps done at the Eaton factory, and this is how we decode them:
Example of a date code: A23F A=January, 23=Day of the Month F=1965. The first letter in the date code is the Month... A=January B=February and so on, and the letter “I” was used and can sometimes be confused as the No. “1”. The date is either one or 2 numbers (1-31). The last letter was the year it was produced. With this you need to know that the first year they were date coded was 1960 and that letter “A”... A=1960 B=1961 C=1962 D=1963 E=1964 F=1965 and so on. Chevy also added the “Broadcast Code”, which was "CK" for a big block Corvette, and the small blocks were “CJ”, and these were also ink stamped on the inside of the clutch plate where the spring is. Guess Ford did not add that.
So, if I decode the one on the CJ site of "A27J", I would get January 27, 1970. The "I23J" would be September 23, 1970. But, the "181C" is a mystery. The dating convention could have changed or not been totally consistent?