No. plate cut off date

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elan23

Active Member
Posts
338
Location
Durham
Always thought that B\W number plates were only legal pre Jan 1973. Found out today that it's rolling, so pre 1975 this year. We live and learn!
 
Always thought that B\W number plates were only legal pre Jan 1973. Found out today that it's rolling, so pre 1975 this year. We live and learn!

We do indeed - thanks for that info.
Not applicable for me now, but could be in the near future.
 
Basically, the general rule is that the vehicle has to comply with regulations in force at the time it was built. This allows old vehicles to stay on the road without having to retroactively make changes. Number plate rules changed in '73, so any vehicle after that needs yellow/white. Any pre-73 vehicle on black plates can continue to have them. Any vehicle registered after 2001 also needs to meet specific requirements for font, size etc, and the same applies to new yellow/white plates put on any '74-'00 vehicle too. Nothing to do with the (now rolling) car tax exemption.
 
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Interesting, can't find any mention of this anywhere else.

Anyone with a little spare time and something more substantial than a phone want to do some digging?

Think i would wait to see it in black and white from DVLA rather than risk a £1000.00 fine to be honest. At this time they say 1973. Although i have seen a fairly new Fiesta with black background pressed ally plates on. Wonder how long he lasted?
 
Think i would wait to see it in black and white from DVLA rather than risk a £1000.00 fine to be honest. At this time they say 1973. Although i have seen a fairly new Fiesta with black background pressed ally plates on. Wonder how long he lasted?
He probably will last for ever, like all the illegally spaced plates that sort of nearly pretend to be your name. Who cares? Clearly not the police.
 
A very nice Merc (newish) parks outside a local curry house with a B&W plate front and rear and he's never had to change it. Could be because it spells some Asian name ... ;)
 
He probably will last for ever, like all the illegally spaced plates that sort of nearly pretend to be your name. Who cares? Clearly not the police.

These are the one's that amuse me the most. The owner's think that others will be impressed by the so-called private plate whereas in fact the poseurs are actually saying 'I'd like a personal plate, but can't afford a real one' I confess to liking the idea of my initials & birth-year on my car, but not at £20K + so I'm happy to stick with the the original.
 
These are the one's that amuse me the most. The owner's think that others will be impressed by the so-called private plate whereas in fact the poseurs are actually saying 'I'd like a personal plate, but can't afford a real one' I confess to liking the idea of my initials & birth-year on my car, but not at £20K + so I'm happy to stick with the the original.

I'm changing my name by deed poll. From now on I wish to be called Mr BLZ8666 :D:D:D
 
There's a 2002 Jaguar near me whose owner keeps it looking very spruce. It recently was given some black and silver plates and I wondered whether he'd get any trouble. So far not, it seems.
 
I did hear of one guy who had a very ordinary numberplate on a car that was much newer than the plate. Turned out he owned numerous trailers, and it was cheaper to transfer the old car's number to the new one than to get new plates made up for all the trailers!
 
Well it would appear that I was correct in what I posted.
The reference is: the Classic Land Rover, page 20, bottom right. (Dec2015)
 
What government reference? as a couple of lines by some hack in a car mag doesn't count for much in court :)
 
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