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Can see nothing in the testers manual about tyre age, sounds like BS.....If rubber is degraded it cracks and that's already a fail. Though I can well believe Michelin pushing the eu to adopt a tyre age limit.
I would never consider using tyres over 10 years old. I think the general belief is that tyres last 7 before the rubber starts to degrade.
I think you may find it that it is recommended that caravan and trailer tyres are changed at 5 years no matter what the condition, and unless the caravan tyre is within that time period your caravan insurance is void. Having had a caravan blow out 18 month ago on the motorway, it was the first thing the police checked and when I took it in for repairs the repair shop manager assked how old the tyres were, and then went outside and checked them including the torn apart one, then rang the insurance to say the tyres were OK.
I suppose you can transfer it to classics and kit cars that sit around for weeks or months without turning a wheel, my caravan as not moved from the garden since September, Yes Daryl?Steve because the weather as been C***
It's important to differentiate between servicing advice such as is offered by the motoring orgs and what is law!
The mot fails tyres on visible damage and deterioration and has nothing to do with tyre age.
Tyre 'shelf' life so to speak is entirely down to storeage and use, not how old the tyre is. Caravan insurers may require frequent tyre changes as caravan tyres are not usually stored/used in a way the affords long tyre life. Save for wear, tyres last much longer when they are in regular use! and degradation in storage is reduced if the tyres are stored in the dark, away from UV light. The loft is often a good place to store tyres.
As for having to replace tyres after a set amount of time it must be remembered when you buy them they could already be upto a year old....that would only leave you four years to use them up before they'd have to be scrapped!
Forcing people to replace perfectly good tyres in such a way is just a certain tyre company putting pressure on the eu for its own finacial benefit. The environmental impact of making and then scrapping perfectly good tyres would be huge and in my opinion unacceptable. Tyre manufacture is a filthy operation and disposing of the waste tyre even more so.
BV.
Even though I have brand new tyres on the Legerra I have a stack of 'legal' tyres which will be used to roll stuff around and even a special set for putting cars through an MOT with.
I also have tyres that are well over ten years old, probably stretched and out of round but still legal tread.
Sometimes it seems the EU do things just to piss us off,
The tow bar on the ambulance is going to be fun as I made it.
The HID thing really gets my goat as if you read the regs it says they must not dazzle oncoming drivers. I even signed the petition to get them banned, hate them with a passion. so many cars seem to have them fitted these days and none of them seem to be very well adjusted.
We've all had that Range Rover on the bumper situation where one glance in the rearview will give you arc eye.
there is more......here is a link to some details, the seat one does not apply to our cars apparently.....
http://www.theaa.com/motoring_advice/car-servicing-repair/mot-chang...
Steve, I thought the Euro was already currency of choice in the South you being so close to the mainland and that.
since it is a C+U requirement to have washers and levelling on HID lights there was talk of it being checked via the MOT......odd that it is not included. but it is worded as "may" and therefore need not be present.....just now.
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