- Mar 13, 2007
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just read an article about the revised MOT starting from may this year. now while it's been due for while and some of the terminology is different there is a major shift in how vehicles are tested.
while this may not concern those with new cars. it could have a big impact on those who run a older tow vehicle.
many items have been added to the list of notable faults and some categories would render the vehicle unusable for instance a fault found to be critical would now render it in undriveable so one would no longer be able to take it away from the test station for repair. as one can now. it has to be done at the test station [RIP DIY] one other notable difference is that any diesel blowing any kind of smoke [regardless of colour] will fail.
to me this means any vehicle say older than 10 years would almost certainly be a scrapper. considering the cost of replacing DP filters catalyst, fuel injectors and so on.
one wonders if there is a hidden agenda at work here to get older diesels off the road much quicker than would be expected normally.
while this may not concern those with new cars. it could have a big impact on those who run a older tow vehicle.
many items have been added to the list of notable faults and some categories would render the vehicle unusable for instance a fault found to be critical would now render it in undriveable so one would no longer be able to take it away from the test station for repair. as one can now. it has to be done at the test station [RIP DIY] one other notable difference is that any diesel blowing any kind of smoke [regardless of colour] will fail.
to me this means any vehicle say older than 10 years would almost certainly be a scrapper. considering the cost of replacing DP filters catalyst, fuel injectors and so on.
one wonders if there is a hidden agenda at work here to get older diesels off the road much quicker than would be expected normally.