Home > General > MOT test credibility? |
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Alistair Member Since: 11 Feb 2011 Location: Peterborough / Bordeaux / Andorra Posts: 7921 |
Well...... it shows a concern regarding the credibility of that particulate tester rather than the test itself.... |
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26th Dec 2020 9:23am |
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nicedayforit Member Since: 11 Jun 2011 Location: Beside the Solway Posts: 3970 |
To be fair to the mot tester it is surprising how much of the rear brake pipes can't be seen with the wheels on the car, even if the car is on a lift.
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26th Dec 2020 9:34am |
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flexfly Member Since: 24 May 2017 Location: Hampshire Posts: 16 |
Not my RR, but last year I took my Udo in for MOT and it passed but with a few advisories - worn bushes, that sort of thing. Because of lockdown etc the car has been garaged almost all year (done 237 miles) and I didn’t get round to booking it in to get addressed (it goes to a specialist for work rather than the place I get the mot done). Took it back to the same place and same tester this year, no advisories. 2012 RR Westminster TDV8
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26th Dec 2020 9:52am |
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drakes Member Since: 26 Jan 2009 Location: Consett Posts: 369 |
My understanding is that the MOT, apart from the efficiency test on the rollers, is just a visual brake test with nothing measured or removed to aid vision. 2010 3.6TDV8 Stornoway Grey/ Black interior - gone
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26th Dec 2020 10:10am |
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northernmonkeyjones Member Since: 24 Mar 2012 Location: derby Posts: 8501 |
the testers aren’t allowed to remove plastic coverings over the pipes, so can’t see them. Have to rely on seeing fluid dripping from them to conclude they are bad. I get what manufacturers cover them up, but surely they would be better left exposed. easier to change, easier to inspect, easier to coat up with some preventative grease every so often!
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26th Dec 2020 10:34am |
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Mikey Member Since: 10 Jan 2008 Location: Dundee Posts: 1747 |
The MOT only states that a car is/isn't roadworthy at a given time on a certain day |
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26th Dec 2020 12:01pm |
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alanm_3 Member Since: 19 Feb 2011 Location: my House, unless I’m not at home, in which case I’m somewhere else. Posts: 6719 |
I lost faith in the objectivity of the MOT test when my car failed because of crack in the windscreen in zone A. The year before, at the same test station, the crack was evident and was at the edge of the windscreen near the bottom, so nowhere near zone A. Because of the shape of the crack, it wasn’t possible for it to develop further. When challenged, the reply was simply, “if we had seen it last year, we would have failed it”. Got - 2017 SDV8 Autobiography in Loire Blue
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26th Dec 2020 1:30pm |
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kgeddes Member Since: 11 Jan 2015 Location: UK Posts: 289 |
Thanks for comments.
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26th Dec 2020 2:10pm |
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northernmonkeyjones Member Since: 24 Mar 2012 Location: derby Posts: 8501 |
They are not permitted to, a general garage doing a test might recommend it after picking up a problem but a testing centre which is just doing a test won’t, they might pull it as an advisory, or note that the pipes weren’t checked due to plastic covers but more often than not they won’t. There is nothing that can't be fixed with a hammer😜😜
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26th Dec 2020 3:23pm |
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ur20v Member Since: 19 Feb 2019 Location: None Posts: 634 |
Unless the plastic covers or guards are non-oem the MOT tester isn’t allowed to put an advisory... everything hidden/cannot be seen must be assumed to be ok unless play is detected in suspension etc.
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26th Dec 2020 4:06pm |
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Red Hot one Member Since: 09 Dec 2018 Location: Herefordshire Posts: 171 |
I bought a 1985 VW Scirocco earlier this year, complete with MOT, the tester must have been blind or a very good mate, rear brakes not working, wheel nuts missing/not fastning, wipers not working, washer, suspension and indicators all not working, all fixed, passed MOT at a proper MOT station without advisories, emissions needed some work to get them somewhere near but after a carburettor rebuild that was to be expected, still, some testers are clearly better than others. |
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26th Dec 2020 7:16pm |
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Ian G Member Since: 07 Sep 2020 Location: Liverpool Posts: 35 |
Or your understanding of the scope of the test. Perhaps the bigger question may be why if you were experiencing brake problems you carried on driving it. |
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26th Dec 2020 9:12pm |
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Ian G Member Since: 07 Sep 2020 Location: Liverpool Posts: 35 |
No - the test doesn't permit removal. You shouldn't use the MOT to fix issues which you know are there - that's neither the role of the test nor a safe way to ensure your car is roadworthy. They have a prescribed list of things to get through and they are allowed to charge a prescribed amount of money. Absolutely not the job of the MOT tester to go delving further in to issues that should be investigated as part of a proper diagnosis, which would be priced on the size of the job and will vary wildly depending on the fault and the car. |
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26th Dec 2020 9:18pm |
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TJRL Member Since: 07 Sep 2019 Location: Reading Posts: 198 |
News to me!!! I had an Audi A3 from new with a full Audi service history and always advisory free MoTs until one year when the MoT had an advisory that some (OEM) covers stopped full inspection of something or other. I kicked off at the Audi dealership as they had instructions to do a "pre-MoT" in order to ensure no advisories (or fails) on my MoT history (I am a bit OCD like that!). Anyway they said the MoT guidance had changed and the only way to avoid this type of advisory was to remove all the OEM covers before the MoT and refit them afterwards. Needless to say my OCD did not stretch to wasting money like that! Each year thereafter the same advisory whinging about the OEM covers, until I purchased my FF and sold the A3. As an aside, I had the A3 for over 14 years, never let me down, and was very cheap to run even with main dealer servicing. 2010 Range Rover TDV8 Baltic Blue Autobiography (2011 MY) - SOLD 1960 Land Rover SII SWB SW 2020 BMW R1250 RT LE 2021 Triton ST-125 (Monkey Bike) |
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28th Dec 2020 1:04pm |
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