G
glencoyne
Guest
Copy of message I have already posted on S2 club forum:
I just took a 1963 2A 109 petrol to my local MOT station. They now
have the new computerised testing system which they did not have last
time. They input the chassis number into the system and then informed
me that they could not carry out the MOT.
Reason given was that the vehicle has a revenue weight of 3499kg gross,
and must therefore undergo a class 7 MOT test (commercial vehicles 3000
- 3499kg GRW) which most MOT stations are not equipped for. I was
given a computerised printout which showed the reason for rejection as
'Vehicle details entered incorrectly at test registration - wrong class
vehicle'.
Sure enough, the V5 states revenue weight of 3499kg gross. I thought
this might be a one-off error: with a 2A weighing about 1800kg empty,
if you load it up to 3499kg the chassis will probably bend in the
middle. But then I checked the V5s for other commercial bodied Land
Rovers that I have at the moment, and found revenue weights on the V5s
as follows:
1971 2a 109: 3499kg
1964 2a 88: 2465kg
1959 S2 88: 3499kg
1980 S3 Lightweight: 3499kg
1983 S3 88: 3499kg
1958 S2 109: 2465kg
1987 90 hardtop: 3499kg
Houston, we have a problem. It looks as though DVLA have been using
3499kg as the default revenue weight on Land Rover V5s for a very long
time. Apart from the shortage of class 7 testing stations, the test
costs more than a class 4 test. I don't know if it is any tougher.
So I rang DVLA and was told that to change the revenue weight, all you
need to do is enter the new weight on the V5C, sign it and send it back
to them. I will do this today, but first:
Does anyone know what the correct revenue weight (gross laden weight)
is for the various models of Land Rover? The only ones I have found so
far (from a Series 3 handbook) are:
Series 3 88 inch (all) 2120kg
Series 3 109 inch 4 and 6 cyl (exc. 1 Ton) 2710kg
I guess these apply equally to Series 2 and 2A equivalents, but it
would be nice to have this confirmed.
Richard
I just took a 1963 2A 109 petrol to my local MOT station. They now
have the new computerised testing system which they did not have last
time. They input the chassis number into the system and then informed
me that they could not carry out the MOT.
Reason given was that the vehicle has a revenue weight of 3499kg gross,
and must therefore undergo a class 7 MOT test (commercial vehicles 3000
- 3499kg GRW) which most MOT stations are not equipped for. I was
given a computerised printout which showed the reason for rejection as
'Vehicle details entered incorrectly at test registration - wrong class
vehicle'.
Sure enough, the V5 states revenue weight of 3499kg gross. I thought
this might be a one-off error: with a 2A weighing about 1800kg empty,
if you load it up to 3499kg the chassis will probably bend in the
middle. But then I checked the V5s for other commercial bodied Land
Rovers that I have at the moment, and found revenue weights on the V5s
as follows:
1971 2a 109: 3499kg
1964 2a 88: 2465kg
1959 S2 88: 3499kg
1980 S3 Lightweight: 3499kg
1983 S3 88: 3499kg
1958 S2 109: 2465kg
1987 90 hardtop: 3499kg
Houston, we have a problem. It looks as though DVLA have been using
3499kg as the default revenue weight on Land Rover V5s for a very long
time. Apart from the shortage of class 7 testing stations, the test
costs more than a class 4 test. I don't know if it is any tougher.
So I rang DVLA and was told that to change the revenue weight, all you
need to do is enter the new weight on the V5C, sign it and send it back
to them. I will do this today, but first:
Does anyone know what the correct revenue weight (gross laden weight)
is for the various models of Land Rover? The only ones I have found so
far (from a Series 3 handbook) are:
Series 3 88 inch (all) 2120kg
Series 3 109 inch 4 and 6 cyl (exc. 1 Ton) 2710kg
I guess these apply equally to Series 2 and 2A equivalents, but it
would be nice to have this confirmed.
Richard