Lack of indicators on my Baines Imola is causing MOT trouble. Got away with an advisory last time but had to go to a different place this time and he failed the bike :-( I could fancy some indicators that maintain the period look of a Bevel but in the meantime it looks like I’ll be going for a daytime MOT ... I never use this bike in the dark anyway. Tape up the headlight and the rear light and jobs a good-un.
Thats the term the MOT testing station used. I guess that’s what they call it still, even if it has officially changed. The advice was just tape up the lights and the bike is MOT covered for use when it isn’t dark ... no indicators required.
I’m under the impression that the bike would be covered for use at night regardless of what the MOT tester had seen - subject to you fitting legal(ish) lights after you got the pass certificate of course? A MOT is a MOT. If it’s afterwards all is good ((but I’d check this)!
Applied to one of my bikes from mot rules. MOT past but with advisory on no lights fitted at test. Direction indicators and hazard warning lamps Presence, condition and operation The Tester will inspect all direction indicators and hazard warning lamps. Direction indicators and hazard warning lamps aren’t needed for vehicles that: don’t have front and rear position lamps have front and rear position lamps that are permanently disconnected, painted over or masked were first used before 1 January 1936 Direction indicators must be amber. Vehicles first used before 1 September 1965 may have white front indicators and red rear indicators, if the direction indicators are combined with stop lamps or combined with front or rear position lamps. Vehicles first used before 1 April 1986 don’t need to have hazard warning devices.
I miss the days when you could see 'Dodgy Dave' down the pub for all your MOT needs, insurance cover notes and VHS tapes of films still on at the pictures. Bloody Brussels.
I hate it that the Brexit debate comes into everything. In this case a little fact checking showed it is wrong to blame the EU for this. MOT harmonisation across the EU has not made UK MOTs more rigorous. Rather the UK already surpassed the standards that the EU got other countries to apply. Oh, and the harmonisation had to be approved by every National Government. Given the state of some cheap hire cars I had on holiday in places like Greece and Spain as a youngster this harmonisation is a good thing I think. https://blogs.ec.europa.eu/ECintheUK/press-reports-on-ec-proposals-on-mot-tests-are-incorrect/ https://blogs.ec.europa.eu/ECintheUK/british-mots-to-be-watered-down/ As in so many things, if we want to blame anyone for the demise of “Dodgy Dave” (no relation) then we should blame Westminster not Brussels.
From my previous reply. Vehicles first used before 1 April 1986 don’t need to have hazard warning devices. No need to tape up anything. If fitted need to work otherwise not fitted legal.
I see post 1986. Then as advised previously by another guy. have front and rear position lamps that are permanently disconnected, painted over or “masked”
You have got it bad I think you will find it was light hearted I don’t think you can drive in the EU with a bike with no lights even if mot’d in the UK - anyone know? If we align with the EU on MOT’s we are fooked
Now I’m finding it difficult to tell which posts are jokes and which aren’t. Could you maybe give us a clue next time ... the convention is to use a ;-) ;-)