Hibrid

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24Carrot

New Member
Posts
77
Hi I am thinking of buying a range rover hibrid.
The guy selling it says it was built before 1997 .but
He's know proof do I need any as it is tax exempt?
 
I had a hybrid 100 inch RRC on a 1973 registration with a Defender body on it, it had all the supporting documentation provided when I bought it, it was built by a firm in the Midlands in 1997 and the disposal of the original series chassis, body modification of the rear series tub and what the chassis number was of the RRC that was put together was all listed with invoices. If the one you are looking at has that, I see no issue and ignore the "paranoids" I did. Adrian Flux insured it as a modified Land Rover with no issue.

Correct documentation is crucial clearly showing a build date, I would not bother with one thats clearly been built after 1997.
 
No proof its built before 97 walk

You could end up quite easily on a q plate. Esp if your moving it to a new area where its unknown and a cop pulls you in.

Being tax exempt will be the least of your worries .

As the guy above me says the docs are crucial
 
OK thanks for this.but if it was home made and not built by a firm. then there wood be no invoices.so what then
 
It's a rrc and engine with a series cab and tub . so it's still on the range rover reg .it is still a range rover on the doc's so all the old MOT's will have the same info.
 
Two scenarios really.

Lets for arguments sake say its been built for the 1997 changes came in force and you can prove it.

A/ You don't have to do any thing

If it was built after 1997 or it cant be determined when precisely it was built, it will need a IVA by VOSA where the age will be determined from the CHASSIS number, unlike before where its number plate was derived from the body.
Personally I think you will enter a world of **** if you have to go through a IVA, if the chassis has been altered in any way they will need documented build details and the whole vehicle will be inspected as if it was a brand new Land Rover product, and lets be realistic here its a Land Rover we are talking about, it will fail.
A friend of mine did a 100 inch Discovery pick up with a Defender body on it cost him well over £1500 just to get it done through VOSA, he had photos of nearly every weld and modification done to the chassis it was inspected as a new Land Rover and was issued a new age related plate, not sure if they do a Q plate any more.

You got any pics of this Hybrid, and details of how much?
 
He wants £4000 .will have to talk to again and see what he's saying.so if he has some invoices for parts going back to 1997 .is that enough?
 
Tbh it sounds ok to me

Rrc chassis engine and box and i presume axles , its on the rangeys plate and so it should be as thats what it has the points for ..... All that has been done is the outriggers changed and a new body fitted .

Its when people are fitting pre 73 series ids to coilers it gets all ####ed up .
 
Sorry I missed the description of it, on page 1, yeah, if its on the RRC reg, I would think its fine, you can insure that easily enough and be quite secure that its not going to cause you any hassle in the future, as long as you have some proof of build, even if its just a few invoices and MOTs.
 
Just get as much age related details that shows it was done before 1997, mine was shortened, it never came to the attention of VOSA, Plod or the MOT place it was just regarded as a Defender Hybrid.
Like Top Drive said the real hassle is having a Series log book and a RRC chassis with coil springs for the tax exempt status, which you wont have as its a RRC on the log book, so I would assume it was built after 1997, as it was more common to have a Series log book on a RRC which was how mine was registered.
 
OK mr nasty first thank you for all your help☺ but when you say MOT so am not sure what you mean .as if its all ways been on the same chassis and doc s. then how will this tell me when it was made
 
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