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9 comments
Govt website at
https://www.gov.uk/historic-vehicles
So if your vehicle was built and registered on 4 January 1981, you need to pretend you don't know when it was built?
I'm showing my age here - a1981 car is a Dad car, not Genieve, Chitty-chitty-Bang-Bang, or Inspector Morse's Jag.
Why on Earth do they not have to have an an appropriate MOT?
It used to be a fixed date - the car had to have been built before 1974 (IIRC) and then all these people who had cars from the late 70s and 80s said that was unfair because their cars were old too, so it became a rolling thing ("more than 40 years ago").
No sensible owner of a historic vehicle would leave their vehicle alone and not bother with having a "like an MOT but not really" service at least once a year, mind...
Genevieve and Chitty would actually be classed as vintage rather than historic. I think they have their own set of rules, and are allowed to drive the London to Brighton run.
This is nuts, cars do not get safer as they get older, they get more worn out and likely to have faults.
This wretched MG looks like it's ready to drop to bits.
Generally I don't like old cars: they really make a fumey smell (a reminder that we used to breath in this all the time) and while many can still pick up speed, they don't have the same safety stuff, like anti-lock servo brakes and steering. And they're often driven by people who consider themselves "fun" - uuurrrgghh.
I think that the original idea was that historic vehicles wouldn't be driven around as much as a modern vehicle, so didn't need the MOT.
One to raise next time the "cyclists should have an MOT lot are out."