adrianreeve
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posted on 17/9/23 at 09:48 PM |
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ULEZ Compliance
Good evening all, I assume that ULEZ compliance will be the same as the donor vehicle? So if I build an MX5 based Haynes Roadster, and the donor
doesn’t comply, neither will the Roadster?
Cheers
Adrian
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nick205
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posted on 18/9/23 at 06:56 AM |
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Don't know for sure, but I'd imagine you have to prove the kit car installation has an identical installation as per the donor (how the
donor was graded) for it to be banded the same. Even then it may be banded different as the kit car hasn't been type approved.
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adithorp
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posted on 18/9/23 at 01:28 PM |
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Just put my Fury reg into TfL checker and it's ULEZ compliant
It's on an '08 plate so probably why, but i wondered as it doesn't have emmision figures like a tintop on the v5 (CO² g/km). I wonder
what others comeback as? (Might help answer the OP's question as well)
https://tfl.gov.uk/modes/driving/check-your-vehicle/
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adrianreeve
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posted on 18/9/23 at 01:45 PM |
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Thanks both. I put the reg of my last kit (an Exocet with an age related ‘98 R reg), and it showed as exempt, so not sure what the rule is now?
Cheers
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Schrodinger
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posted on 19/9/23 at 07:53 AM |
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Just checked my Stylus and there is no ULEZ charge but £15/day in central London
Keith
Aviemore
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Sanzomat
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posted on 19/9/23 at 10:49 AM |
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quote: Originally posted by adrianreeve
Thanks both. I put the reg of my last kit (an Exocet with an age related ‘98 R reg), and it showed as exempt, so not sure what the rule is now?
Cheers
I think, but not completely sure, that the checking software just uses the date of first registration so if your, say, Exocet, got a '98 age
related but was registered post 2006 the software lets you off regardless of the actual emissions. I know people with Cobra replicas running classic
american V8's on carbs that got through SVA on emissions due to it being an old engine but as they registered the car post 2006 they are ULEZ
free. I guess for the numbers involved and the mileages driven by these cars it doesn't matter that much.
The converse is true for some cars for example S2 Lotus Elises registered as early 2002 and running Rover k series engines are ULEZ compliant even
though MGFs with the same engine/ECU/emissions controls aren't. That's because Lotus tested and recorded the emissions with results low
enough to qualify even though Euro4 hadn't been implemented then and AFAIK they didn't produce enough cars to have to qualify for Euro 3. MG
Rover got Euro3 compliance for the MGF but even though they met the requirements of Euro4, as Euro4 wasn't in being they were labelled Euro 3 so
get charged ULEZ...
There is scope, I believe, for kit cars that were registered pre 2006 and had sufficient emissions data tested/recorded at SVA and printed onto the V5
to retrospectively get ULEZ exemption recorded on the database but I suspect its a ball ache.
My GTM was first registered 2004 so has to pay. It's Rover K series probably produces sufficiently low emissions to be exempt but it wasn't
recorded at SVA so I'm stuck - the price of getting it retrospectively tested and arguing its compliance would be far greater than I'd ever
spend on ULEZ fees.
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adrianreeve
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posted on 19/9/23 at 10:53 AM |
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Thanks for the detailed reply, unusual for red tape and bureaucracy to work in favour of kit cars!
Cheers
quote: Originally posted by Sanzomat
quote: Originally posted by adrianreeve
Thanks both. I put the reg of my last kit (an Exocet with an age related ‘98 R reg), and it showed as exempt, so not sure what the rule is now?
Cheers
I think, but not completely sure, that the checking software just uses the date of first registration so if your, say, Exocet, got a '98 age
related but was registered post 2006 the software lets you off regardless of the actual emissions. I know people with Cobra replicas running classic
american V8's on carbs that got through SVA on emissions due to it being an old engine but as they registered the car post 2006 they are ULEZ
free. I guess for the numbers involved and the mileages driven by these cars it doesn't matter that much.
The converse is true for some cars for example S2 Lotus Elises registered as early 2002 and running Rover k series engines are ULEZ compliant even
though MGFs with the same engine/ECU/emissions controls aren't. That's because Lotus tested and recorded the emissions with results low
enough to qualify even though Euro4 hadn't been implemented then and AFAIK they didn't produce enough cars to have to qualify for Euro 3. MG
Rover got Euro3 compliance for the MGF but even though they met the requirements of Euro4, as Euro4 wasn't in being they were labelled Euro 3 so
get charged ULEZ...
There is scope, I believe, for kit cars that were registered pre 2006 and had sufficient emissions data tested/recorded at SVA and printed onto the V5
to retrospectively get ULEZ exemption recorded on the database but I suspect its a ball ache.
My GTM was first registered 2004 so has to pay. It's Rover K series probably produces sufficiently low emissions to be exempt but it wasn't
recorded at SVA so I'm stuck - the price of getting it retrospectively tested and arguing its compliance would be far greater than I'd ever
spend on ULEZ fees.
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