nickclarke
Member
I've seen on a forum elsewhere that for a fluid leak to cause an outright fail the criterion is a 75mm puddle in 5 minutes. Can anyone verify this?
I've read the same, but can't find any kind of official source to back it up.
I've seen on a forum elsewhere that for a fluid leak to cause an outright fail the criterion is a 75mm puddle in 5 minutes. Can anyone verify this?
My 1974 S3 is going for voluntary MOT next week having had last years advisories fixed, especially new drivers footwell. My other 56 year old classic sailed through on Wednesday with an advisory about a diff oil leak which was news to me. Garage floor evidence suggests about a drip per month!
I've seen on a forum elsewhere that for a fluid leak to cause an outright fail the criterion is a 75mm puddle in 5 minutes. Can anyone verify this?
I will also be MOTing my old lady(1971) In case of insurance/police issues.One thing I have not had an answer too, is how are insurance companies going to view vehicles that have had no MOT test within a 12 month period? My worry is that over the next few years there will be a few accidents involving MOT exempt vehicles where insurance companies refuse to pay out on the grounds that there was a mechanical defect. The only reasonable way to then prove that your old vehicle it kept in good order is to have an MOT once a year even though it is not legally required! At the moment it is generally accepted by insurance companies that if a mechanical fault that the average person would not have been aware of caused an accident they will pay out provided the vehicle has an MOT. I think the bliss of no longer needing an MOT may not be all that long lasting in practice.
Flawed logic.I will also be MOTing my old lady(1971) In case of insurance/police issues.
I think that's the conclusion many are coming to. There's also the problem of assurering road worthiness in the case of an accident. I fully appreaciate that the legal status of an MOT is that it only proves road worthiness at the time of the MOT, hower in practice it shows that the vehicle was in a fit condtion at that time and the owner was prepared to get it tested. At the moment we are all less than a year away from MOTs, the vast majority will service their vehicles as before or even more deligently just in case. But I fear some wont and so we will get a few years down the line with some absolute death traps on the road that could place a cloud over the rest of us.
Yes that is correct......75mm in diameter in 5 minutes for an oil leakMy 1974 S3 is going for voluntary MOT next week having had last years advisories fixed, especially new drivers footwell. My other 56 year old classic sailed through on Wednesday with an advisory about a diff oil leak which was news to me. Garage floor evidence suggests about a drip per month!
I've seen on a forum elsewhere that for a fluid leak to cause an outright fail the criterion is a 75mm puddle in 5 minutes. Can anyone verify this?
could you expand on that?Flawed logic.
I've not had my S2A MOTed since its exempt and I may get an "engineers report" if ii insurence or agreed value become an issue but for me the leagal status of the MOT plus the justifcation for the exemption make the "voluntary MOT" (in my view) a risky option.
Because MoT exempt vehicles are not a new thing. And if it’s perfectly legal not to MoT a vehicle. An insurer cannot refuse to payout because you are following the law.could you expand on that?