Legality puzzle

Author
Discussion

100SRV

Original Poster:

2,256 posts

256 months

Saturday 21st June
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A friend shared this with me: https://www.facebook.com/marketplace/item/12265121...

Looking more closely (I'm not familiar with legality around IVA) I can't reconcile it being a "1974 Series 3" but having a coil-sprung chassis and TDi / automatic gearbox.

Is this a case of the chassis being replaced with a gavanized equivalent and the powertrain being a "permitted replacement"?

How does this all sit with MoT exemption and tax-free status?

paintman

7,815 posts

204 months

That sort of thing used to pop up all the time on ebay & was often discussed on Land Rover forums.
Chances are that a lot of them the only thing that was of the correct date was the identity plate!

Some were reported to DVLA who basically didn't give a monkeys.

100SRV

Original Poster:

2,256 posts

256 months

Wednesday
quotequote all
I suppose it only becomes a problem if the vehicle is involved in a crime and the Police decided to take "other offences" into consideration.

hidetheelephants

30,067 posts

207 months

Yesterday (00:04)
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100SRV said:
A friend shared this with me: https://www.facebook.com/marketplace/item/12265121...

Looking more closely (I'm not familiar with legality around IVA) I can't reconcile it being a "1974 Series 3" but having a coil-sprung chassis and TDi / automatic gearbox.

Is this a case of the chassis being replaced with a gavanized equivalent and the powertrain being a "permitted replacement"?

How does this all sit with MoT exemption and tax-free status?
It's snide and ought to have both privileges revoked. Non-standard chassis = modified vehicle, no MoT exemption and no tax-free status.