Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
![]() |
|
UK diy (uk.d-i-y) For the discussion of all topics related to diy (do-it-yourself) in the UK. All levels of experience and proficency are welcome to join in to ask questions or offer solutions. |
Reply |
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Car tax runs out the end of this month.
Car being traded in on 2nd of next month. Don't suppose DVLA's computer would overlook the 2 days and doubt whether the garage will backdate their ownership of the car. Looks like the best option is to drop the car off on the 28th and manage without until the new one is available on the 2nd. Don't really want to tax for 6 or 12 months and get 5 or 11 months back. Any other ideas? TIA for any. |
#2
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Feb 17, 2:54 pm, Invisible Man wrote:
Car tax runs out the end of this month. Car being traded in on 2nd of next month. Don't suppose DVLA's computer would overlook the 2 days and doubt whether the garage will backdate their ownership of the car. Looks like the best option is to drop the car off on the 28th and manage without until the new one is available on the 2nd. Don't really want to tax for 6 or 12 months and get 5 or 11 months back. Any other ideas? TIA for any. strongly suggest the new car salesman helps you out with the use of a demo or something else for the 48 (or at least 24) hours? JimK |
#3
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 17/02/2010 14:54, Invisible Man wrote:
Car tax runs out the end of this month. Car being traded in on 2nd of next month. Don't suppose DVLA's computer would overlook the 2 days and doubt whether the garage will backdate their ownership of the car. Looks like the best option is to drop the car off on the 28th and manage without until the new one is available on the 2nd. IME you have 1 month before the DVLA will issue a fine. There is still the problem of being caught by ANPR on the way there on the 2nd - how about booking a MOT test? |
#4
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article , Invisible Man
writes Car tax runs out the end of this month. Car being traded in on 2nd of next month. Don't suppose DVLA's computer would overlook the 2 days and doubt whether the garage will backdate their ownership of the car. Looks like the best option is to drop the car off on the 28th and manage without until the new one is available on the 2nd. To be squeaky clean you will have to SORN it and deliver it to the dealer's premises before end of play 28th Feb, that will avoid any audit of the vehicle's history showing it as untaxed. Make sure you send the appropriate parts of your V5 to DVLA (whatever the dealer may say about it) and check that you receive a confirmation of the transfer from DVLA or keep chasing them until they do. -- fred BBC3, ITV2/3/4, channels going to the DOGs |
#5
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Jim" wrote in message
... On 17/02/2010 14:54, Invisible Man wrote: Car tax runs out the end of this month. Car being traded in on 2nd of next month. Don't suppose DVLA's computer would overlook the 2 days and doubt whether the garage will backdate their ownership of the car. Looks like the best option is to drop the car off on the 28th and manage without until the new one is available on the 2nd. IME you have 1 month before the DVLA will issue a fine. Not any more. They expect it to be taxed or SORNED with no leeway. Peter Crosland |
#6
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Invisible Man wrote:
Car tax runs out the end of this month. Car being traded in on 2nd of next month. Don't suppose DVLA's computer would overlook the 2 days and doubt whether the garage will backdate their ownership of the car. Looks like the best option is to drop the car off on the 28th and manage without until the new one is available on the 2nd. yup. And either register a SORN or simply say 'not my car' Don't really want to tax for 6 or 12 months and get 5 or 11 months back. Any other ideas? TIA for any. |
#7
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Invisible Man wrote:
Car tax runs out the end of this month. Car being traded in on 2nd of next month. Don't suppose DVLA's computer would overlook the 2 days and doubt whether the garage will backdate their ownership of the car. Looks like the best option is to drop the car off on the 28th and manage without until the new one is available on the 2nd. Don't really want to tax for 6 or 12 months and get 5 or 11 months back. Any other ideas? TIA for any. According to our son who is a member of Manchester police, the DVLA, nor the police would get involved until after the time that it takes for the DVLA computer to catch up. I don't know the number of days, but I would expect it to be more than two. The police can phone insurance companies up, but that is subject to even longer delays. Dave |
#8
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 17/02/2010 18:56, Dave wrote:
Invisible Man wrote: Car tax runs out the end of this month. Car being traded in on 2nd of next month. Don't suppose DVLA's computer would overlook the 2 days and doubt whether the garage will backdate their ownership of the car. Looks like the best option is to drop the car off on the 28th and manage without until the new one is available on the 2nd. Don't really want to tax for 6 or 12 months and get 5 or 11 months back. Any other ideas? TIA for any. According to our son who is a member of Manchester police, the DVLA, nor the police would get involved until after the time that it takes for the DVLA computer to catch up. I don't know the number of days, but I would expect it to be more than two. The police can phone insurance companies up, but that is subject to even longer delays. Dave Thanks Dave. I am not so worried about getting pulled over or having the car picked up by a camera. I just think that if I send DVLA notice that I sold the car on the 2nd they will want an explanation of where it was for the 2 days since the road fund license expired. |
#9
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Feb 17, 7:18 pm, Invisible Man wrote:
On 17/02/2010 18:56, Dave wrote: Invisible Man wrote: Car tax runs out the end of this month. Car being traded in on 2nd of next month. Don't suppose DVLA's computer would overlook the 2 days and doubt whether the garage will backdate their ownership of the car. Looks like the best option is to drop the car off on the 28th and manage without until the new one is available on the 2nd. Don't really want to tax for 6 or 12 months and get 5 or 11 months back. Any other ideas? TIA for any. According to our son who is a member of Manchester police, the DVLA, nor the police would get involved until after the time that it takes for the DVLA computer to catch up. I don't know the number of days, but I would expect it to be more than two. The police can phone insurance companies up, but that is subject to even longer delays. Dave Thanks Dave. I am not so worried about getting pulled over or having the car picked up by a camera. I just think that if I send DVLA notice that I sold the car on the 2nd they will want an explanation of where it was for the 2 days since the road fund license expired. so:- could/will they *make* you retrospectively apply for a 6month tax disc from which you subsequently reclaim 5months tax? and is there a fine? Ring em up and ask hypothetically? faling that tell em you sold it on 28th even though you still drove it (fully insured etc) for 2 days more? if plod's not gonna get you who will? JimK |
#10
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Invisible Man wrote:
Car tax runs out the end of this month. Car being traded in on 2nd of next month. Don't suppose DVLA's computer would overlook the 2 days and doubt whether the garage will backdate their ownership of the car. Any other ideas? Get them to collect on trade plates? Prebook an MOT at the garage, then cancel it when you arrive there? Theo |
#11
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Feb 17, 2:54*pm, Invisible Man wrote:
Car tax runs out the end of this month. Car being traded in on 2nd of next month. Don't suppose DVLA's computer would overlook the 2 days and doubt whether the garage will backdate their ownership of the car. Looks like the best option is to drop the car off on the 28th and manage without until the new one is available on the 2nd. Don't really want to tax for 6 or 12 months and get 5 or 11 months back. Any other ideas? TIA for any. The garage is going to have to tax it. Why don't you renew the tax as usual and get the garage to adjust the price to inlcude the (6 months -2days) of tax. Robert |
#12
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In message , Jim
writes On 17/02/2010 14:54, Invisible Man wrote: Car tax runs out the end of this month. Car being traded in on 2nd of next month. Don't suppose DVLA's computer would overlook the 2 days and doubt whether the garage will backdate their ownership of the car. Looks like the best option is to drop the car off on the 28th and manage without until the new one is available on the 2nd. IME you have 1 month before the DVLA will issue a fine. There is still the problem of being caught by ANPR on the way there on the 2nd - how about booking a MOT test? This happened to the son of someone who works for me - so it does happen -- geoff |
#13
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
JimK wrote:
faling that tell em you sold it on 28th even though you still drove it (fully insured etc) for 2 days more? if plod's not gonna get you who will? The DVLA computer. It's a source of revenue... Why don't you just drop it off 2 days early and declare it SORN? Andy |
#14
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
RobertL wrote:
On Feb 17, 2:54 pm, Invisible Man wrote: Car tax runs out the end of this month. Car being traded in on 2nd of next month. Don't suppose DVLA's computer would overlook the 2 days and doubt whether the garage will backdate their ownership of the car. Looks like the best option is to drop the car off on the 28th and manage without until the new one is available on the 2nd. Don't really want to tax for 6 or 12 months and get 5 or 11 months back. Any other ideas? TIA for any. The garage is going to have to tax it. No garage ever taxes a car. Its SORN or something. Why don't you renew the tax as usual and get the garage to adjust the price to inlcude the (6 months -2days) of tax. Robert |
#15
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Jim wrote:
On 17/02/2010 14:54, Invisible Man wrote: Car tax runs out the end of this month. Car being traded in on 2nd of next month. Don't suppose DVLA's computer would overlook the 2 days and doubt whether the garage will backdate their ownership of the car. Looks like the best option is to drop the car off on the 28th and manage without until the new one is available on the 2nd. IME you have 1 month before the DVLA will issue a fine. There is still the problem of being caught by ANPR on the way there on the 2nd - how about booking a MOT test? I did that with the daughters car when we met at Warwick services and I brought it up to Preston to get an MOT and looked at for a water leak. Garage owner laughed his head of, but agreed there was nothing the police could do about it, because it was on its way for a pre booked MOT. The law does not stipulate were, or how far away, the MOT station should be. It passed, with no recommendation's, by the way. Dave |
#16
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]() I did that with the daughters car when we met at Warwick services and I brought it up to Preston to get an MOT and looked at for a water leak. Garage owner laughed his head of, but agreed there was nothing the police could do about it, because it was on its way for a pre booked MOT. The law does not stipulate were, or how far away, the MOT station should be. It passed, with no recommendation's, by the way. Dave I did this for many years when I lived in a bus (which had insurance but no tax.) When eviction / site moving time came, book an MOT, go for MOT, pass or fail, return to new site. [g] |
#17
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "george [dicegeorge]" wrote in message ... I did that with the daughters car when we met at Warwick services and I brought it up to Preston to get an MOT and looked at for a water leak. Garage owner laughed his head of, but agreed there was nothing the police could do about it, because it was on its way for a pre booked MOT. The law does not stipulate were, or how far away, the MOT station should be. It passed, with no recommendation's, by the way. Dave I did this for many years when I lived in a bus (which had insurance but no tax.) When eviction / site moving time came, book an MOT, go for MOT, pass or fail, You do understand the difference between driving a car with no MOT and driving an MOT failure? Check that your insurance is valid if you are driving an un-roadworthy car. return to new site. [g] |
#18
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
dennis@home wrote:
You do understand .. Yes Dennis. WE understand. |
#19
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "The Natural Philosopher" wrote in message ... dennis@home wrote: You do understand .. Yes Dennis. WE understand. Are you sure?.. you do keep coming out with cr@p. |
#20
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
dennis@home wrote:
"george [dicegeorge]" wrote in message ... I did that with the daughters car when we met at Warwick services and I brought it up to Preston to get an MOT and looked at for a water leak. Garage owner laughed his head of, but agreed there was nothing the police could do about it, because it was on its way for a pre booked MOT. The law does not stipulate were, or how far away, the MOT station should be. It passed, with no recommendation's, by the way. Dave I did this for many years when I lived in a bus (which had insurance but no tax.) When eviction / site moving time came, book an MOT, go for MOT, pass or fail, You do understand the difference between driving a car with no MOT and driving an MOT failure? Check that your insurance is valid if you are driving an un-roadworthy car. return to new site. [g] yes its much more serious driving an unroadworthy vehicle than an un-moted one, legally morally and dangerously, but you can fail a MOT if the indicator light flashing indicator bulb is loose! [g] |
#21
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 17/02/2010 22:47, dennis@home wrote:
"george [dicegeorge]" wrote in message ... I did that with the daughters car when we met at Warwick services and I brought it up to Preston to get an MOT and looked at for a water leak. Garage owner laughed his head of, but agreed there was nothing the police could do about it, because it was on its way for a pre booked MOT. The law does not stipulate were, or how far away, the MOT station should be. It passed, with no recommendation's, by the way. Dave I did this for many years when I lived in a bus (which had insurance but no tax.) When eviction / site moving time came, book an MOT, go for MOT, pass or fail, You do understand the difference between driving a car with no MOT and driving an MOT failure? Check that your insurance is valid if you are driving an un-roadworthy car. return to new site. [g] Probably time I apologised for starting an OT subject. I did however have no idea it would lead to the old MoT/unroadworthiness/insurance discussion. I suppose I could get out my angle grinder and take it to the dealer in pieces, stick it back together with body filler and the WD40 must come in somewhere. Will probably get the dealer to sign for the car on the 28th so it is no longer my car when the tax is due. Hoping the same dealer will collect our other car for service on the 2nd and give me a lift to pick up the new one. |
#22
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
We were somewhere around Barstow, on the edge of the desert, when the
drugs began to take hold. I remember "dennis@home" saying something like: I did this for many years when I lived in a bus (which had insurance but no tax.) When eviction / site moving time came, book an MOT, go for MOT, pass or fail, You do understand the difference between driving a car with no MOT and driving an MOT failure? Check that your insurance is valid if you are driving an un-roadworthy car. the point . Dennis, you've missed it, again. The poster didn't actually say his old MoT had run out, did he? You can get a vehicle MoTd as often as you like. |
#23
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
george [dicegeorge] wrote:
I did that with the daughters car when we met at Warwick services and I brought it up to Preston to get an MOT and looked at for a water leak. Garage owner laughed his head of, but agreed there was nothing the police could do about it, because it was on its way for a pre booked MOT. The law does not stipulate were, or how far away, the MOT station should be. It passed, with no recommendation's, by the way. Dave I did this for many years when I lived in a bus (which had insurance but no tax.) When eviction / site moving time came, book an MOT, go for MOT, pass or fail, return to new site. [g] The law is an ass :-) Dave |
#24
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "george [dicegeorge]" wrote in message ... yes its much more serious driving an unroadworthy vehicle than an un-moted one, legally morally and dangerously, but you can fail a MOT if the indicator light flashing indicator bulb is loose! There is also documented proof that it was un-roadworthy when you left the MOT station. Mine failed last year.. faulty headlight.. it went during the beam alignment test. 8-( Fist time I have ever failed an MOT and I must have had 50+ of them. |
#25
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Grimly Curmudgeon" wrote in message ... We were somewhere around Barstow, on the edge of the desert, when the drugs began to take hold. I remember "dennis@home" saying something like: I did this for many years when I lived in a bus (which had insurance but no tax.) When eviction / site moving time came, book an MOT, go for MOT, pass or fail, You do understand the difference between driving a car with no MOT and driving an MOT failure? Check that your insurance is valid if you are driving an un-roadworthy car. the point . Dennis, you've missed it, again. The poster didn't actually say his old MoT had run out, did he? You can get a vehicle MoTd as often as you like. Its still an un-roadworthy car if it fails, or did you miss that? |
#26
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"dennis@home" gurgled happily, sounding
much like they were saying: The poster didn't actually say his old MoT had run out, did he? You can get a vehicle MoTd as often as you like. Its still an un-roadworthy car if it fails, or did you miss that? It'd be unroadworthy even without taking it to the test centre. |
#27
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Dave" wrote in message ... Jim wrote: On 17/02/2010 14:54, Invisible Man wrote: Car tax runs out the end of this month. Car being traded in on 2nd of next month. Don't suppose DVLA's computer would overlook the 2 days and doubt whether the garage will backdate their ownership of the car. Looks like the best option is to drop the car off on the 28th and manage without until the new one is available on the 2nd. IME you have 1 month before the DVLA will issue a fine. There is still the problem of being caught by ANPR on the way there on the 2nd - how about booking a MOT test? I did that with the daughters car when we met at Warwick services and I brought it up to Preston to get an MOT and looked at for a water leak. Garage owner laughed his head of, but agreed there was nothing the police could do about it, because it was on its way for a pre booked MOT. The law does not stipulate were, or how far away, the MOT station should be. It passed, with no recommendation's, by the way. Dave Many many years ago I was 'done' for no MOT on my Frog Eyed Sprite, as although I was on the way to a pre-booked MOT I stopped at a 'hole in the wall' to get cash to pay for the MOT! Apparently you have to go 'directly' to the garage. AWEM |
#28
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Feb 17, 11:24 pm, Invisible Man wrote:
On 17/02/2010 22:47, dennis@home wrote: "george [dicegeorge]" wrote in message ... I did that with the daughters car when we met at Warwick services and I brought it up to Preston to get an MOT and looked at for a water leak. Garage owner laughed his head of, but agreed there was nothing the police could do about it, because it was on its way for a pre booked MOT. The law does not stipulate were, or how far away, the MOT station should be. It passed, with no recommendation's, by the way. Dave I did this for many years when I lived in a bus (which had insurance but no tax.) When eviction / site moving time came, book an MOT, go for MOT, pass or fail, You do understand the difference between driving a car with no MOT and driving an MOT failure? Check that your insurance is valid if you are driving an un-roadworthy car. return to new site. [g] Probably time I apologised for starting an OT subject. I did however have no idea it would lead to the old MoT/unroadworthiness/insurance discussion. I suppose I could get out my angle grinder and take it to the dealer in pieces, stick it back together with body filler and the WD40 must come in somewhere. Will probably get the dealer to sign for the car on the 28th so it is no longer my car when the tax is due. Hoping the same dealer will collect our other car for service on the 2nd and give me a lift to pick up the new one. maybe look for another dealer if he *can't* help a regular customer on this trifling issue !?! |
#29
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Feb 17, 8:59 pm, Andy Champ wrote:
JimK wrote: faling that tell em you sold it on 28th even though you still drove it (fully insured etc) for 2 days more? if plod's not gonna get you who will? The DVLA computer. It's a source of revenue... shurely they'll be after the buyer/garage rather than OP/seller? JimK |
#30
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Feb 18, 8:04*am, "dennis@home"
wrote: "Grimly Curmudgeon" wrote in message ... We were somewhere around Barstow, on the edge of the desert, when the drugs began to take hold. I remember "dennis@home" saying something like: I did this for many years when I lived in a bus (which had insurance but no tax.) When eviction / site moving time came, book an MOT, go for MOT, pass or fail, You do understand the difference between driving a car with no MOT and driving an MOT failure? Check that your insurance is valid if you are driving an un-roadworthy car. the point . Dennis, you've missed it, again. The poster didn't actually say his old MoT had run out, did he? You can get a vehicle MoTd as often as you like. Its still an un-roadworthy car if it fails, or did you miss that?- Is it? That would mean that if the car fails the MoT but has an unexpired existing MoT it still cannot be driven on theroad. I thougth there were two grades of fail for the MoT and only the more serious one meant you could not drive it away. In the old days there was a special red failure certificate for "unsafe to drive on the road". Robert |
#31
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
We were somewhere around Barstow, on the edge of the desert, when the
drugs began to take hold. I remember "dennis@home" saying something like: The poster didn't actually say his old MoT had run out, did he? You can get a vehicle MoTd as often as you like. Its still an un-roadworthy car if it fails, or did you miss that? No, it's not necessarily. You ought to learn the difference between 'unroadworthy' and 'MoT failure'. |
#32
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "JimK" wrote in message ... On Feb 17, 2:54 pm, Invisible Man wrote: Car tax runs out the end of this month. Car being traded in on 2nd of next month. Don't suppose DVLA's computer would overlook the 2 days and doubt whether the garage will backdate their ownership of the car. Looks like the best option is to drop the car off on the 28th and manage without until the new one is available on the 2nd. Don't really want to tax for 6 or 12 months and get 5 or 11 months back. Any other ideas? TIA for any. strongly suggest the new car salesman helps you out with the use of a demo or something else for the 48 (or at least 24) hours? JimK A loan of some trade plates? Adam |
#33
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"ARWadsworth" gurgled happily, sounding
much like they were saying: strongly suggest the new car salesman helps you out with the use of a demo or something else for the 48 (or at least 24) hours? A loan of some trade plates? Only if they want their trade plates withdrawing. |
#34
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Feb 18, 11:38*am, Grimly Curmudgeon
wrote: We were somewhere around Barstow, on the edge of the desert, when the drugs began to take hold. I remember "dennis@home" saying something like: The poster didn't actually say his old MoT had run out, did he? You can get a vehicle MoTd as often as you like. Its still an un-roadworthy car if it fails, or did you miss that? No, it's not necessarily. You ought to learn the difference between 'unroadworthy' and 'MoT failure'. Suggest you look at the response from VOSA on http://www.mottest.net/mot/mot-failure-question/ MBQ |
#35
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Man at B&Q wrote:
On Feb 18, 11:38 am, Grimly Curmudgeon wrote: We were somewhere around Barstow, on the edge of the desert, when the drugs began to take hold. I remember "dennis@home" saying something like: The poster didn't actually say his old MoT had run out, did he? You can get a vehicle MoTd as often as you like. Its still an un-roadworthy car if it fails, or did you miss that? No, it's not necessarily. You ought to learn the difference between 'unroadworthy' and 'MoT failure'. Suggest you look at the response from VOSA on http://www.mottest.net/mot/mot-failure-question/ But that doesn't explain the situation where the failure does not make the car unroadworthy. If the tyres are illegal then it clearly is unroadworthy as well as being an MOT failure. But what if it fails because a headlamp bulb has blown and you would be driving home in daylight and good visibility? Andrew |
#36
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Andrew May gurgled happily, sounding much like
they were saying: But that doesn't explain the situation where the failure does not make the car unroadworthy. If the tyres are illegal then it clearly is unroadworthy as well as being an MOT failure. But what if it fails because a headlamp bulb has blown and you would be driving home in daylight and good visibility? Indeed. Perhaps an even clearer example - the windscreen on my car is currently cracked, following a stonechip the other weekend. The crack is into the wiper swept area by just over 40mm. It is, therefore, an MOT fail. It's barely visible to the driver, as it's behind the mirror. It contributes nothing to the structural strength of the car, as it's an older-style gasket-mount windscreen, not bonded. Is the car unroadworthy? If I took it for an MOT this afternoon, and it failed, would it be unroadworthy afterwards? |
#37
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Andrew Mawson wrote:
"Dave" wrote in message ... Jim wrote: On 17/02/2010 14:54, Invisible Man wrote: Car tax runs out the end of this month. Car being traded in on 2nd of next month. Don't suppose DVLA's computer would overlook the 2 days and doubt whether the garage will backdate their ownership of the car. Looks like the best option is to drop the car off on the 28th and manage without until the new one is available on the 2nd. IME you have 1 month before the DVLA will issue a fine. There is still the problem of being caught by ANPR on the way there on the 2nd - how about booking a MOT test? I did that with the daughters car when we met at Warwick services and I brought it up to Preston to get an MOT and looked at for a water leak. Garage owner laughed his head of, but agreed there was nothing the police could do about it, because it was on its way for a pre booked MOT. The law does not stipulate were, or how far away, the MOT station should be. It passed, with no recommendation's, by the way. Dave Many many years ago I was 'done' for no MOT on my Frog Eyed Sprite, as although I was on the way to a pre-booked MOT I stopped at a 'hole in the wall' to get cash to pay for the MOT! Apparently you have to go 'directly' to the garage. Ouch! The stewards. |
#38
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Wed, 17 Feb 2010 22:47:06 +0000, dennis@home wrote:
You do understand the difference between driving a car with no MOT and driving an MOT failure? Check that your insurance is valid if you are driving an un-roadworthy car. I thought he was driving a bus? fx: fossicks aha: "I did this for many years when I lived in a bus" Can we spell bus, Dennis? Can we? b - u - s |
#39
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Andrew May" wrote in message ... But that doesn't explain the situation where the failure does not make the car unroadworthy. If the tyres are illegal then it clearly is unroadworthy as well as being an MOT failure. But what if it fails because a headlamp bulb has blown and you would be driving home in daylight and good visibility? And if it starts to rain and you need to use your headlights? Its still an offence and because you have a fail notice you won't get away with saying it must have just failed and may not be given the opportunity to fix it before they issue a summons. Andrew |
#40
![]()
Posted to uk.d-i-y
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"dennis@home" gurgled happily, sounding
much like they were saying: But what if it fails because a headlamp bulb has blown and you would be driving home in daylight and good visibility? And if it starts to rain and you need to use your headlights? Weather forecasts aside, the headlight isn't the greatest example - so how about my windscreen? |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Ice road truckers | UK diy | |||
One more for the road. | Electronic Schematics | |||
One more for the road. | Electronic Schematics | |||
OT Road numbers | Home Repair | |||
Dusty road | Home Repair |