Omega Owners Forum
Chat Area => General Discussion Area => Topic started by: the alarming man on 02 January 2011, 22:50:06
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the goverment are now talking about making the test bienninal...i can't see it myself apart from anything else how will they make up the shortfall from having the test revenue fall from every year too every two years......double the test fee i guess :-? :y
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cant see that happening but then again im beyond being shocked nowadays
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who knows mate with this lot :-? :y
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Government wants more revenue. Just another stealth tax. Ken wanted to drive cars off the rd, can't see much difference with this. ::) ::)
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What I think should happen is the scrapping of as soon as you drive out of the MOT Stn you car is not deemed safe to drive,....... its either safe for the next 12 months or not
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......... its either safe for the next 12 months or not
How's that going to work then?
eg Your car passes it's MOT, and as you drive back home a spring breaks. Your car has 12/13months ticket but it's not road worthy as far as a MOT is concerned. There are far too many variables on a car to make a car not safe/MOT pass'able.
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I'm afraid I'm against it! :o :o I know we all hate and dread that time of year but it does remove a lot of very unsafe vehicles from the roads ;)
Oh... And for a lot of people it's the only time their vehicle gets any type of maintenance/check :-X >:(
Keep it Annual ;)
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......... its either safe for the next 12 months or not
How's that going to work then?
eg Your car passes it's MOT, and as you drive back home a spring breaks. Your car has 12/13months ticket but it's not road worthy as far as a MOT is concerned. There are far too many variables on a car to make a car not safe/MOT pass'able.
Absolutely. Just like any kind of testing, it only proves anything at the time of test. Not all testers are infallible either, so it's not even a guarantee of that. ;)
To pronounce a car roadworthy for 12 months is nonsense.
Biennial MOTs would be a disaster, IMHO. The majority of car owners I know bar the more meticulous enthusiasts that gather at this place and similar only have their car maintained in response to MOT failures, particularly if they own older cars where "it's more than the car's worth" to change the tyres, fix the ABS, change the oil, replace the brake lamp bulbs, etc.
If you have that kind of attitude a life of public transport should be imposed on you, IMHO, but at least an annual MOT provides some assurance that a car is, if not road worthy for the rest of the year, not a total death trap.
Consider also that the bar would have to be raised for all of us. MOT testers will need to ask "will that last 2 years?" so we will not get away with presenting brake pads that have another year's wear on them, for example.
I wouldn't be surprised if the surge in dangerous vehicles then prompts a knee-jerk requirement to have vehicles serviced by a "registered" person (probably calling himself a "motor engineer" >:().
Owners of condensing boilers will already know where that leads.
No, it's a very bad idea.
Kevin
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am i right in saying most european countries have been biennial for years. & its a lot stricter
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am i right in saying most european countries have been biennial for years. & its a lot stricter
You still have the same problem in that a lot can deteriate in two years. Brake pads, light alignment, even fixing bulbs seem to be only done at the MOT by a lot of people I know. A car scraping through the MOT can turn into a death trap in two years.
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I'm afraid I'm against it! :o :o I know we all hate and dread that time of year but it does remove a lot of very unsafe vehicles from the roads ;)
Oh... And for a lot of people it's the only time their vehicle gets any type of maintenance/check :-X >:(
Keep it Annual ;)
Annual test keeps my windscreen clear of dingly danglies... ...yet the moronic 25% of the population are allowed their rather great distracting gonk gayboy satnavs plastered all over the line of vision. >:(
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Annual test keeps my windscreen clear of dingly danglies... ...yet the moronic 25% of the population are allowed their rather great distracting gonk gayboy satnavs plastered all over the line of vision. >:(
Don't get me started on the Satnav morons! I had one the other day that had mounted it directly infront of the steering wheel. To see she had to look over/around it. Thank god she turned off so I didn't get to see the inevitable.
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am i right in saying most european countries have been biennial for years. & its a lot stricter
Bi annual tests for cars is the norm in Spain. They become biannual when the vehicle is 10 years old. For vans and commercial vehicles it is every six months.
Most Spaniards don't drive as hard as Brits or as many miles in a year so maybe a biannual test is OK.
As to the test being harder? I don't know. It is different. Having just had a UK MOT I was surprised the car passed. Handbrake, headlight alignment, shocker condition, 2 broken door straps, corrosion.
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I am certainly against such a move for all the reasons well explained in the posts above :)
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Absolutely no way should it ever be bi-annual!
Some cars are "death traps" after 8 months of elapsed mot, think what they would be like in 24 months?????
No, keep it as it is, and regulate mot testers better.
Car drivers that love their cars always keep them roadworthy, its only the "I only ever put petrol in it" people that will suffer.
just my opinion, of course.
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Am i right in thinking Taxis need a test TWICE a year?
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we have bi annual tests in Gibraltar not noticed bieng any stricter vans and lorries annualy
i personally would prefer yearly tests for everything would help to get rid of some of the cars driving around
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we have bi annual tests in Gibraltar .......
but Gib is small enough to push your car around it yourself.
Does it still have 160(?) pubs? ;) ;)
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Am i right in thinking Taxis need a test TWICE a year?
Most, if not all, licensing authorities insist on it. The only exception here is if the car is less than 365 days old, then it won't be due a mechanical test until it is a year old, or 6 months from date of plating, whichever is later.
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Every two years here in Ireland although I believe it may be changing to an annual test as from this year .
I have to say that many , but not all , vehicles don't get looked at between the tests and are in a dreadful condition .Lights are a classic example with them either not working or woefully adjusted due to bodywork damage which again goes unattended .
Interestingly cars over 30 years old are classed as " vintage " and are therefore excused from any form of roadworthy check .
I believe an annual test is best .
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After having said what I did, it's my MOT today, and, in giving the car a once-over last night I am ashamed to admit I found two bulbs had failed. :-[
Kevin
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After having said what I did, it's my MOT today, and, in giving the car a once-over last night I am ashamed to admit I found two bulbs had failed. :-[
Kevin
Fantastic :y :y That really made me smile.
If you lived in Spain then it might have been over 600 days before you had fixed it!! ;D
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After having said what I did, it's my MOT today, and, in giving the car a once-over last night I am ashamed to admit I found two bulbs had failed. :-[
Kevin
Fantastic :y :y That really made me smile.
If you lived in Spain then it might have been over 600 days before you had fixed it!! ;D
It was "only" one of the sidelights and the number plate light. ::)
Kevin
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After having said what I did, it's my MOT today, and, in giving the car a once-over last night I am ashamed to admit I found two bulbs had failed. :-[
Kevin
Fantastic :y :y That really made me smile.
If you lived in Spain then it might have been over 600 days before you had fixed it!! ;D
It was "only" one of the sidelights and the number plate light. ::)
Kevin
Damn! That reminds me that one of the plate lights is out on the MR2 (and er, has been for a couple of years.. don't think I plugged it back in properly the last time the bumper was off).
*mutters* another job on the list, then.