I have little doubt that it is good sense to have caravans properly checked for road worthiness and for the gas and electrics to be periodically checked for safety. As it stands MOT stations are not capable of handling caravans, nor do they have the necessary industry based accreditation's for dealing with LPG or 230V mains systems.
The muted electrical inspection tests seem to have fallen from public debate, and in my opinion were unnecessarily over complicated and thus expensive, and I have been amazed that no similar scheme was proposed for gas systems. However I am fairly sure that such schemes are in the offing, and perhaps this thread is the result of speculation on the matter.
Hello Surfer
May I assure you my response and question was entirely genuine. Thanks for the pointer:-
I had already reviewed that particular document, and several others published by VCA and VOSA. I found no specific mention of caravan gas systems or gas appliances although on page 19 where fridges and combi boilers are mentioned in the context electromagnetic interference. It goes on to say "These components are generally all approved as a separate unit or turned off via a relay when the trailer is connected to a towing vehicle"
Hello Lutz,
You are of course correct that a caravan remains a vehicle, and perhaps I was clumsy in my explanation. I was trying to point out that as the heating and other gas appliances are not used whilst the caravan is in motion, in fact they should be isolated from the gas supply, and thus are not part of the road-going aspect of the vehicle, and thus it could be argued they should not be subject VCA/VOSA road-worthiness inspections.
We all know that working on gas appliances in any professional context requires Gas Safe accreditation. I would have serious reservations about MOT stations passing judgments on gas systems unless they have been fully trained on gas systems to Gas safe levels of competence.
I have absolutely no doubt that most competent garage mechanics would be more than capable of achieving the accreditation, but are they aware of the cost of the courses and maintaining the acreditation, and how that would affect the viability of running an MOT station?
Actually none of the documents I have seen actually say that these trailer tests would have to be carried out at MOT stations. so we may all be jumping to the wrong conclusions.