Omega Owners Forum
Chat Area => General Car Chat => Topic started by: BazaJT on 28 October 2020, 17:58:14
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It seems to be becoming popular to fit what I can only describe as smoked number plates.I've seen a few cars round here are now sporting them but for some odd reason they seem to be either fitted to the front or rear not both ends on the same car.Presumably illegal as you can't read them from the required distance are they supposed to be anti-camera plates or just the latest chavvy fashion item?
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Lots of them round here too.
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Welcome back :y :y
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Welcome back :y :y
Cheers, mate. I'll ask one of the local street rats about the plates when I've finished my sentence.
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Welcome back :y :y
Cheers, mate. I'll ask one of the local street rats about the plates when I've finished my sentence.
Not dead then..... :-\ ::) ;)
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Oh ffs, he,s back ! :o ::)
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Welcome back :y :y
Cheers, mate. I'll ask one of the local street rats about the plates when I've finished my sentence.
Not dead then..... :-\ ::) ;)
Apparently not, you'll be overjoyed to hear :)
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He has missed you really :-*
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I assume his life has lacked any meaning without me there to brighten his day.
The old boy is lost without me. :)
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I assume his life has lacked any meaning without me there to brighten his day.
The old boy is lost without me. :)
It does brighten my day when the tax on both of your cars are due and you have to part with over a grand. ;D
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Welcome back Ste 8)
Re. The numberplates, as far as I can work out, stupid people think they make you invisible to speed cameras.
Whereas in reality a) they don't and b) you are guaranteed to get a tug from any and all coppers who see the plate because it's a guaranteed win for Her Madge's coffers, and that's before they look over the rest of the car.
In a similar vein, people who incorrectly space private plates to nearly spell words or their name. ::)
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Welcome back Ste 8)
Re. The numberplates, as far as I can work out, stupid people think they make you invisible to speed cameras.
Whereas in reality a) they don't and b) you are guaranteed to get a tug from any and all coppers who see the plate because it's a guaranteed win for Her Madge's coffers, and that's before they look over the rest of the car.
In a similar vein, people who incorrectly space private plates to nearly spell words or their name. ::)
Thanks, Jimmy. Incorrectly spaced plates are becoming quite the norm around here, as are the darkened plates. As far as I can see, only a traffic cop would bother pulling anyone for the 'offence', and I really can't remember the last time I actually saw one. Local plod are not interested at all, and the few of them I see driving around seem to totally ignore minor transgressions.
Bigger fish to fry in today's world, I'm afraid.
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Probably fair.
A guy I work with got a £60 wonder going through a mobile speed trap. He was under the limit, but they picked up on his illegally spaced plate.
Guess that's just the risk you run :D
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Often a dodgy plate leads to other 'issues'....
Derbys Police pull over driver for dodgy plate, blows over drink drive limit. (https://twitter.com/DerbyshireRPU/status/1315461141842276352?s=20)
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Around these parts it is often big four wheel drive, Chelsea tractors, that have “personalised” plates, but not the legal versions. They spell names are make some form of statement, and act as though no driving law applies to them judging how they bully other drivers >:(
There is though a Bentley parked a street up from me with the plates RU SILLY, using of course an illegal version and spacing of “5”. But no local police officer will deal with it as it is a “Traffic Police” matter! ::) ::)
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Around these parts it is often big four wheel drive, Chelsea tractors, that have “personalised” plates, but not the legal versions. They spell names are make some form of statement, and act as though no driving law applies to them judging how they bully other drivers >:(
There is though a Bentley parked a street up from me with the plates RU SILLY, using of course an illegal version and spacing of “5”. But no local police officer will deal with it as it is a “Traffic Police” matter! ::) ::)
The correct index, is RU51 LLY. Showing as a Bentley on the publicly available MOT history on DVLA :) - as it happens, it ran out of MOT earlier this month.
I don't usually talk about my job much, but, as an aside, I think some credit is due to the "local" police officers that are not dealing with it. I feel qualified to say that, after 9 years doing the job full time, in various capacities, including mainly Response, Neighborhood, Traffic, and CID.
The "local officers" are spanked. Run ragged. They are constantly dealing with domestic abuse, violence, drugs, thefts, burglaries, robberies, serious assaults.... usually on VERY depleted numbers. Then, of course, there are the officers constantly looking for missing people, attending mental health episodes... doing the lengthy referrals generated from this, etc.
I'm not saying it's RIGHT, but it's the world we live in. An illegally spaced, but otherwise legible numberplate, is low the pile for policing... and dare I say, in the current climate, understandably :y
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Driving a 19 year old Bentley, they probably have bigger concerns than the number plate ::)
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There is though a Bentley parked a street up from me with the plates RU SILLY, using of course an illegal version and spacing of “5”. But no local police officer will deal with it as it is a “Traffic Police” matter! ::) ::)
DVLA are as guilty as anyone regarding name spelling number plates, as they SELL them. A few years back a work colleague showed me a letter from DVLA. They were offering him the chance of buying a number plate that spelt his surname ............ if you used a black bolt at the bottom of the two consecutive one's to make a 'U' and closed the gap a bit between the centre gap. They obviously didn't mention the black bolt but it was the only way it spelt his surname. ::)
So, in my view they actively encourage it as there is money in it for them. :) They certainly wouldn't give a monkeys if you got fined as they didn't outright suggest what to do. :y
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Around these parts it is often big four wheel drive, Chelsea tractors, that have “personalised” plates, but not the legal versions. They spell names are make some form of statement, and act as though no driving law applies to them judging how they bully other drivers >:(
There is though a Bentley parked a street up from me with the plates RU SILLY, using of course an illegal version and spacing of “5”. But no local police officer will deal with it as it is a “Traffic Police” matter! ::) ::)
The correct index, is RU51 LLY. Showing as a Bentley on the publicly available MOT history on DVLA :) - as it happens, it ran out of MOT earlier this month.
I don't usually talk about my job much, but, as an aside, I think some credit is due to the "local" police officers that are not dealing with it. I feel qualified to say that, after 9 years doing the job full time, in various capacities, including mainly Response, Neighborhood, Traffic, and CID.
The "local officers" are spanked. Run ragged. They are constantly dealing with domestic abuse, violence, drugs, thefts, burglaries, robberies, serious assaults.... usually on VERY depleted numbers. Then, of course, there are the officers constantly looking for missing people, attending mental health episodes... doing the lengthy referrals generated from this, etc.
I'm not saying it's RIGHT, but it's the world we live in. An illegally spaced, but otherwise legible numberplate, is low the pile for policing... and dare I say, in the current climate, understandably :y
The strange thing is James, because of my contacts with the police when the Bentley first appeared on the estate, parked up on a grass verge, I reported it as maybe a stolen car as it did not move for 4 weeks and a Bentley parked around here is VERY unusual. The police checked it out and then it started to be driven around as though everything was ok, but that number plate in it's current form was not apparently faulted by the officers. Which proves the point that I understand only too well, that I touched on, and you echo, that neighbour officers have much to deal with. It is a Traffic matter, pure and simple as far as the officers are concerned.
The point is that although the law is clear on number plates, spacing, colour, layout, fonts, etc, many vehicles are driving around blatantly in breach of the regulations. I just wonder what happens at the MOT; are plates swapped over to the legal versions or does the MOT tester turn a blind eye?
Perhaps this Bentley has failed it's MOT because of this number plate and therefore is not currently legal? ;)
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Perhaps you have too much time on your hands... :-\
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Driving a 19 year old Bentley, they probably have bigger concerns than the number plate ::)
The Bentley is just 8 years old and is in great condition externally.
You have made the common mistake of dating a vehicle incorrectly based on a "personalised plate" obtained / came with vehicle. ;)
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Perhaps you have too much time on your hands... :-\
Judging by how many posts you make I reckon it is YOU who has too much time on their hands! ::) ::) ;D ;D ;)
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I work shifts :P
Unless it's been dumped across your front door, or is being driven around the area by spotted yoofs throwing McDongals wrappers out of the windows, then it probably isn't your concern. Especially if you keep making a fuss about it, as you stand a fair chance of becoming that person...
The community support wombles might have something to say, but unless the car is actually caught in the act of doing something, then there's not much to do. As an aside, if the tax is over a month overdue, then the DVLA might pretend to be interested.
Unfortunately whilst everyone is being scared into staying indoors for no apparent reason, you have more chance of being given a new Bentley of your own than anything actually being done.
Not saying that it's right, but it is a sign of the times :-X
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Incidentally, it's taxed until next October, so it's unlikely to attract much unwanted attention.
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Nothing special now a Bentley or a Rolls cheap luxury motoring as long as you avoid main dealerships.
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Probably fair.
A guy I work with got a £60 wonder going through a mobile speed trap. He was under the limit, but they picked up on his illegally spaced plate.
Guess that's just the risk you run :D
You see, that I don't understand.
The reason for enforcing the correct font and spacing is so that cameras can read them? Therefore camera technology is so good, it knows when it shouldn't be able to read it, but can.
Therefore knowing the font is wrong but knowing that the camera can recognise it, should that actually be an offence.
Says the man who would stop and search anyone with stupid number plates, if I were paid to.
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I expect the incorrectly spaced and illegal font pictures get rejected by the system or at least flagged :-\
then a human looks at the photos and decides how much money they are worth :P
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The camera can read them in the pissing rain in the dark ;D
The regimented uniformity is to make them easier for a person to read ;)
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I work shifts :P
Unless it's been dumped across your front door, or is being driven around the area by spotted yoofs throwing McDongals wrappers out of the windows, then it probably isn't your concern. Especially if you keep making a fuss about it, as you stand a fair chance of becoming that person...
The community support wombles might have something to say, but unless the car is actually caught in the act of doing something, then there's not much to do. As an aside, if the tax is over a month overdue, then the DVLA might pretend to be interested.
Unfortunately whilst everyone is being scared into staying indoors for no apparent reason, you have more chance of being given a new Bentley of your own than anything actually being done.
Not saying that it's right, but it is a sign of the times :-X
No, once I had reported it as possibly dumped I left the rest to the police, and I was done with it. as you are right about people who hammer on about the same challenge to the police over and over again.:)
However, I am one who cares about the local community, being a police advisor on such issues, and only over the last three weeks I have successfully reported fly tipping (a very real problem in Kent if nowhere else!) with the individuals involved fined by the local council.
Other issues I am also dealing with because, unlike so many out there in our so called "society", I do not look the other way. Anything that spoils the environment for the general public has got to be tackled and if no one bothers to report it nothing will change.
Yes, I have time on my hands now so give that to the police and local community when I can and the former in particular requires my advice / guidance / feedback.
That and my community work which uses my professional skills and talents stops me falling asleep in my chair and becoming very old very quickly!! When I cannot do what I do now please someone shoot me!! ;D ;D ;D ;D ;)
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I work shifts :P
Unless it's been dumped across your front door, or is being driven around the area by spotted yoofs throwing McDongals wrappers out of the windows, then it probably isn't your concern. Especially if you keep making a fuss about it, as you stand a fair chance of becoming that person...
The community support wombles might have something to say, but unless the car is actually caught in the act of doing something, then there's not much to do. As an aside, if the tax is over a month overdue, then the DVLA might pretend to be interested.
Unfortunately whilst everyone is being scared into staying indoors for no apparent reason, you have more chance of being given a new Bentley of your own than anything actually being done.
Not saying that it's right, but it is a sign of the times :-X
No, once I had reported it as possibly dumped I left the rest to the police, and I was done with it. as you are right about people who hammer on about the same challenge to the police over and over again.:)
However, I am one who cares about the local community, being a police advisor on such issues, and only over the last three weeks I have successfully reported fly tipping (a very real problem in Kent if nowhere else!) with the individuals involved fined by the local council.
Other issues I am also dealing with because, unlike so many out there in our so called "society", I do not look the other way. Anything that spoils the environment for the general public has got to be tackled and if no one bothers to report it nothing will change.
Yes, I have time on my hands now so give that to the police and local community when I can and the former in particular requires my advice / guidance / feedback.
That and my community work which uses my professional skills and talents stops me falling asleep in my chair and becoming very old very quickly!! When I cannot do what I do now please someone shoot me!! ;D ;D ;D ;D ;)
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Good on you Lizzie I too have reported flytippers who were caught & this morning was able to assist our local coppers with some hare coursers who thought that their old Suzuki would get over the fields near me no match for the Range Rover..😄
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I work shifts :P
Unless it's been dumped across your front door, or is being driven around the area by spotted yoofs throwing McDongals wrappers out of the windows, then it probably isn't your concern. Especially if you keep making a fuss about it, as you stand a fair chance of becoming that person...
The community support wombles might have something to say, but unless the car is actually caught in the act of doing something, then there's not much to do. As an aside, if the tax is over a month overdue, then the DVLA might pretend to be interested.
Unfortunately whilst everyone is being scared into staying indoors for no apparent reason, you have more chance of being given a new Bentley of your own than anything actually being done.
Not saying that it's right, but it is a sign of the times :-X
No, once I had reported it as possibly dumped I left the rest to the police, and I was done with it. as you are right about people who hammer on about the same challenge to the police over and over again.:)
However, I am one who cares about the local community, being a police advisor on such issues, and only over the last three weeks I have successfully reported fly tipping (a very real problem in Kent if nowhere else!) with the individuals involved fined by the local council.
Other issues I am also dealing with because, unlike so many out there in our so called "society", I do not look the other way. Anything that spoils the environment for the general public has got to be tackled and if no one bothers to report it nothing will change.
Yes, I have time on my hands now so give that to the police and local community when I can and the former in particular requires my advice / guidance / feedback.
That and my community work which uses my professional skills and talents stops me falling asleep in my chair and becoming very old very quickly!! When I cannot do what I do now please someone shoot me!! ;D ;D ;D ;D ;)
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Good on you Lizzie I too have reported flytippers who were caught & this morning was able to assist our local coppers with some hare coursers who thought that their old Suzuki would get over the fields near me no match for the Range Rover..😄
Well done to you as well Rangie :y :y :y
Someone has to stand up for what is right ;)
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Unless it's been dumped across your front door, or is being driven around the area by spotted yoofs throwing McDongals wrappers out of the windows, then it probably isn't your concern. Especially if you keep making a fuss about it, as you stand a fair chance of becoming that person...
Don't the Police and other law enforcement authorities rely enormously on information or intelligence passed to them by members of the public?
If every law abiding member of the public / community felt reporting incidents 'isn't their concern', then the authorities job would become exceptionally harder than it already is. Reporting these matters brings small incidents to their notice; an incident that get continually reported should eventually get some action, even if nothing appears to be done as a result of the initial report.
You should never under estimate the value of reported incidents - how many serious crimes / incidents have eventually brought the perpetrators to justice with a small shred of information / intelligence that many would have thought was insignificant at the time? Looking the other way or having the mind set that 'it's not my concern' is burying your head in the sand - especially if it affects your own community.
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Don't disagree with that...
My comments were made knowing that Lizzie lives in a mixed housing area and comes across as quite a 'busy' older person who could potentially become a target to those ne'erdowells who might not respond to kindly to being caught out.
Not to say that she, or Rangie aren't absolutely right, but inviting retaliation needs to be a carefully calculated risk ;)
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Driving a 19 year old Bentley, they probably have bigger concerns than the number plate ::)
Its a 2012 Continental GT
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Driving a 19 year old Bentley, they probably have bigger concerns than the number plate ::)
Its a 2012 Continental GT
Hmmm an 8 year old Bentley Continental GT with dodgy number plates and no MOT that gets parked up on grass verges in an area where such cars are unusual should attract the attention of the boys in blue IMO. ::)
I wonder what's in the boot? Bags of Columbian marching powder? A dead body? Bank robbing paraphernalia? :)
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Unless it's been dumped across your front door, or is being driven around the area by spotted yoofs throwing McDongals wrappers out of the windows, then it probably isn't your concern. Especially if you keep making a fuss about it, as you stand a fair chance of becoming that person...
Don't the Police and other law enforcement authorities rely enormously on information or intelligence passed to them by members of the public?
If every law abiding member of the public / community felt reporting incidents 'isn't their concern', then the authorities job would become exceptionally harder than it already is. Reporting these matters brings small incidents to their notice; an incident that get continually reported should eventually get some action, even if nothing appears to be done as a result of the initial report.
You should never under estimate the value of reported incidents - how many serious crimes / incidents have eventually brought the perpetrators to justice with a small shred of information / intelligence that many would have thought was insignificant at the time? Looking the other way or having the mind set that 'it's not my concern' is burying your head in the sand - especially if it affects your own community.
Exactly right! :y :y :y :y
I KNOW Kent Police at least, but really all Police Forces, rely very much on "intelligence" and the public informing them of actual crimes taking place and the possibility of those in the process of taking place, let alone information after a crime has been committed.
Although I am an official advisor for Kent Police with a badge to match, every member of the public has a duty to report anything of concern, no matter how small and incidental it may seem, if there is a possible breach of the law or simply suspicious activity.
That is the only way that our society can be served and protected.
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Don't disagree with that...
My comments were made knowing that Lizzie lives in a mixed housing area and comes across as quite a 'busy' older person who could potentially become a target to those ne'erdowells who might not respond to kindly to being caught out.
Not to say that she, or Rangie aren't absolutely right, but inviting retaliation needs to be a carefully calculated risk ;)
Thanks DG, that is appreciated, as it is a very thoughtful statement that could be very true if I got "careless" :y :y :y
But everything I do is in conjunction with my duties for Kent Police. However I am no fool, so would not get in the crossfire of serious criminals now (although I did in my professional life) and just leave that to the officers in blue once I have fed in any intelligence I have. Round here though thankfully, like in so many quarters, it is usually just low level crime. Some of the big stuff I actually witness is via expensive cars (hence my interest in the Bentley) with A class drug dealers involved, but once again I do no more than make phone calls IF I have the evidence for police action.
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What if the "baddies" google the reg of the bentley , find this thread, work out who you are :o
they will read your other posts, find you own an omega ::)
best drop the Omega round to me to look after Lizzie ;)
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What if the "baddies" google the reg of the bentley , find this thread, work out who you are :o
they will read your other posts, find you own an omega ::)
best drop the Omega round to me to look after Lizzie ;)
;D ;D ;D ;D No chance Dave! ;D ;D :-* ;)
Don't worry either, no serious drug dealer would drive around in an un-MOT'd Bentley and not pay to have it made legal for the road ;)
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What if the "baddies" google the reg of the bentley , find this thread, work out who you are :o
they will read your other posts, find you own an omega ::)
best drop the Omega round to me to look after Lizzie ;)
;D ;D ;D ;D No chance Dave! ;D ;D :-* ;)
Don't worry either, no serious drug dealer would drive around in an un-MOT'd Bentley and not pay to have it made legal for the road ;)
Most of the numpties who transport class A for a living drive a wreck which is ripe for a tug, speed everywhere or don't wear a seatbelt. I would drive a euro shitbox hybrid or the like and obey the rules of the road. Least you can do when you have folk relying on you delivering efficiently and on time.
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I could take you the tale of one major drug kingpin who got caught because his couriers car was uninsured and got a tug on the M4 Police suspicion was aroused because the driver began sweating profusely, once searched loads of class A on board , the driver sung like a bird to save his neck, the car was a new BMW. These idiots have no common sense at all.
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Most of the numpties who transport class A for a living drive a wreck which is ripe for a tug, speed everywhere or don't wear a seatbelt. I would drive a euro shitbox hybrid or the like and obey the rules of the road. Least you can do when you have folk relying on you delivering efficiently and on time.
is this your new business plan Uncle Stemo :-\
you could probably get a big fat grant off Rishi Sunak for that ,plus a free electric car :)
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What if the "baddies" google the reg of the bentley , find this thread, work out who you are :o
they will read your other posts, find you own an omega ::)
best drop the Omega round to me to look after Lizzie ;)
;D ;D ;D ;D No chance Dave! ;D ;D :-* ;)
Don't worry either, no serious drug dealer would drive around in an un-MOT'd Bentley and not pay to have it made legal for the road ;)
Most of the numpties who transport class A for a living drive a wreck which is ripe for a tug, speed everywhere or don't wear a seatbelt. I would drive a euro shitbox hybrid or the like and obey the rules of the road. Least you can do when you have folk relying on you delivering efficiently and on time.
Or something anonymous like an Astra estate :D
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What if the "baddies" google the reg of the bentley , find this thread, work out who you are :o
they will read your other posts, find you own an omega ::)
best drop the Omega round to me to look after Lizzie ;)
;D ;D ;D ;D No chance Dave! ;D ;D :-* ;)
Don't worry either, no serious drug dealer would drive around in an un-MOT'd Bentley and not pay to have it made legal for the road ;)
Most of the numpties who transport class A for a living drive a wreck which is ripe for a tug, speed everywhere or don't wear a seatbelt. I would drive a euro shitbox hybrid or the like and obey the rules of the road. Least you can do when you have folk relying on you delivering efficiently and on time.
Or something anonymous like an Astra estate :D
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Don't you believe it I've seen enough drug dealers photographs on their prison cell walls, theyv live on a rough council estate with a Ferrari parked outside & wonder how they got caught idiots the majority of them.
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What if the "baddies" google the reg of the bentley , find this thread, work out who you are :o
they will read your other posts, find you own an omega ::)
best drop the Omega round to me to look after Lizzie ;)
;D ;D ;D ;D No chance Dave! ;D ;D :-* ;)
Don't worry either, no serious drug dealer would drive around in an un-MOT'd Bentley and not pay to have it made legal for the road ;)
Most of the numpties who transport class A for a living drive a wreck which is ripe for a tug, speed everywhere or don't wear a seatbelt. I would drive a euro shitbox hybrid or the like and obey the rules of the road. Least you can do when you have folk relying on you delivering efficiently and on time.
Or something anonymous like an Astra estate :D
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Don't you believe it I've seen enough drug dealers photographs on their prison cell walls, theyv live on a rough council estate with a Ferrari parked outside & wonder how they got caught idiots the majority of them.
Yes indeed, and they actually post pictures of themselves on social media with the highly expensive cars and "loads of money" :o :o :o :o
Thank God most of them are so stupid and give the police the heads up ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D :y
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What if the "baddies" google the reg of the bentley , find this thread, work out who you are :o
they will read your other posts, find you own an omega ::)
best drop the Omega round to me to look after Lizzie ;)
;D ;D ;D ;D No chance Dave! ;D ;D :-* ;)
Don't worry either, no serious drug dealer would drive around in an un-MOT'd Bentley and not pay to have it made legal for the road ;)
Most of the numpties who transport class A for a living drive a wreck which is ripe for a tug, speed everywhere or don't wear a seatbelt. I would drive a euro shitbox hybrid or the like and obey the rules of the road. Least you can do when you have folk relying on you delivering efficiently and on time.
Or something anonymous like an Astra estate :D
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Don't you believe it I've seen enough drug dealers photographs on their prison cell walls, theyv live on a rough council estate with a Ferrari parked outside & wonder how they got caught idiots the majority of them.
I meant Stemo ::)
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;D ;D
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I just wonder what happens at the MOT; are plates swapped over to the legal versions or does the MOT tester turn a blind eye?
Postal MOTs not common round your way?
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I just wonder what happens at the MOT; are plates swapped over to the legal versions or does the MOT tester turn a blind eye?
Postal MOTs not common round your way?
What TB? You are joking.........aren’t you?
Mind you with the right money, the contacts and no morals then I suppose anything is possible! ::) ::) ;)
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I just wonder what happens at the MOT; are plates swapped over to the legal versions or does the MOT tester turn a blind eye?
Postal MOTs not common round your way?
What TB? You are joking.........aren’t you?
Mind you with the right money, the contacts and no morals then I suppose anything is possible! ::) ::) ;)
Stop playing the innocent ;D
A postal MOT is usually much cheaper, so is far more rife in populations in less affluent areas. And thats before you consider any repairs. Its the modern day equivalent of driving without an MOT, which is more difficult with the change from having traffic plod in cars towards mobile cash machines.
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Postal MOTs are much harder now that the test is 'recorded' in real time.
A guaranteed pass is the modern equivalent :y No, that :y should be a :-X
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Postal MOTs are much harder now that the test is 'recorded' in real time.
A guaranteed pass is the modern equivalent :y No, that :y should be a :-X
That’s how I understand it, the “dodgy” MOT is produced by a quick bung of cash, a wink and a look the other way by the tester whilst apparently doing his job.
Although my MOT,s have always been above board, how my 1960 A40 ever passed it’s MOT twice in 1970 then71 I will never know as the tester used his hammer to test the chassis but somehow never saw the rampant rust! :o :o
A MOT tester down here was done recently for multiple accounts of giving out passes that should have been fails. They are still tracking down the vehicles involved. :y
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Postal MOTs are much harder now that the test is 'recorded' in real time.
A guaranteed pass is the modern equivalent :y No, that :y should be a :-X
Seems to have made little difference.... ...apart from they all seem to be over lunchtime or tea break time ;D