No….Good evening all.
Am i totally crazy or is there such a thing as a series 2 or 3 chassis that uses defender coil springs?
Cheers Landy-Lee
I'm guess you haven't actually bothered reading the guidelines then.... as that mostly definitely isn't what it says....You often see them for sale as complete vehicles on ebay. But really they should be on Q plates as they have had a major component change that isn’t allowed - unless of course it was 30 plus years ago.
Q plate and type approval is the correct route, if a chassis is modified or replaced with a non original item.
That isn’t what you said earlier either. There are lots of ways. But the entire process is a self declaration one. There is no test or inspection to tell you if it needs to examined.so how exactly can you change from leaf springs to coil springs without altering the chassis?
FFS try reading the actual guidance rather than spouting BS will you!There are plenty of things you can do - but the legality and resale can be very questionable.
If you choose to ignore the rules that are specific about altering a chassis - then I, and many law abiding people with a conscious will not touch the result when you choose to sell it on.
devalue a vehicle if you so wish!
You should try asking your insurance broker how they feel about you altering the chassis on your vehicle, or fitting a modified chassis that has no type approval?
@landy-leeThat isn’t what you said earlier either. There are lots of ways. But the entire process is a self declaration one. There is no test or inspection to tell you if it needs to examined.
It is actually more complicated than that.@landy-lee
If you ALTER the chassis, which you would prolly have to do to fit the springs you want then it becomes a radically altered vehicle.
So read the regs.
(This from the govt website
"Get a ‘Q’ registration number
You will not be able to keep your vehicle’s original registration number if one of the following applies:
Your vehicle must pass the relevant type approval test to get a ‘Q’ prefix registration number."
- it has fewer than 8 points
- it has a second-hand or altered chassis, monocoque bodyshell or frame
- there’s evidence that 2 vehicles have been welded together to form one (ie ‘cut and shut’)
Vehicle registration
How to register your vehicle and the cost - new registrations, kit cars, rebuilds, radically altered vehicles, old and classic vehicles, vehicle identification numbers, Q plateswww.gov.uk
So the short answer is, yes, you can do it legally, but it is a bit of a faff. The test for type approval may or may not be a pain.
IVA shouldn't be neccesary I doubt, just a visual inspection, which is quicker and cheaper.
Once it is properly registered then insurance, even if you have to do it through a specialist, isn't that difficult and can be surprisingly cheap.
This from a bloke (me) who rana kit car club for years and has known about SVA and IVA for a very long time.
There are of course those who do it and don't tell anyone, the vehicle will pass the MOT although the tester may cock an eyebrow or two, if you don't tell your insurer, fair enough you take that risk. But the chassis wil or should have a number on it. Something else to be considered.
Speaking personally I'd either not bother or do it the proper way, just make sure you have time on your hands and another vehicle to run around in.
And there is this old thread on doing it here.
Series 2 coil conversion
Hi has anyone here done a series 2 or 3 with coil suspension on the original chassis ?www.landyzone.co.uk
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