Cha! Yes please!!I immediately noticed the fairly wide "outrigger" headlight pods on the Ford racer, which are there to get the car through the IVA test. Elio will have to fit something similar to their 3 wheeler if they want to sell them in UK.
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You can register using your Google, Facebook, or Twitter account, just click here.Cha! Yes please!!I immediately noticed the fairly wide "outrigger" headlight pods on the Ford racer, which are there to get the car through the IVA test. Elio will have to fit something similar to their 3 wheeler if they want to sell them in UK.
In UK we have to put our vehicles through an annual safety check known as the MOT test. If the vehicle fails, it can't be driven until the defects are rectified and the insurance will also be deemed invalid. If you get caught driving without insurance they will impound your car. HID headlights mean an instant MOT test fail and there's no let out by trying to go elsewhere in an attempt to pass - everything is now on a computer database and once the fault is on there, there is no hiding it. If you drive without the test certificate, there are now number plate recognition cameras linked to the database computer, they are at service stations, fitted to police cars, everywhere.
I immediately noticed the fairly wide "outrigger" headlight pods on the Ford racer, which are there to get the car through the IVA test. Elio will have to fit something similar to their 3 wheeler if they want to sell them in UK.
Interested, yes, anywhere in the realm of reality, no. Ah well, I guess I will just drive the Elio and make real loud Vrooming noises and pretend... I will check out the link though, for grins.For those interested in the rules for getting an Elio registered in UK, here's a link to the testing manual:
I've never been across the big pond but the ones around here are paved yet bouncing is a fact of life .... it seems as if every time they fill a pothole, they create a speed bump ....
WOW.The rules here in UK do already cater for vehicles like the Elio. In theory it should be quite straightforward to register an Elio but there are a lot of design requirements to be met and the lighting design regs need to be complied with. Any non-EEC type approved vehicle needs to undergo and pass a detailed design/safety inspection before it can be issued with a certificate so that it can be road registered. The inspection type relevant to the Elio is known as the Motorcycle Single Vehicle Approval, or MSVA. It will come under the classification of a "bodied motor tricycle" (not quite the same group as the Canam Spyder which is more like an open motorcycle with two front wheels). As far as I can see, Elio will need headlights on outriggers (or P3 style bodywork with those stylish side pods on the nose cone) to get the headlights within the maximum distance of 400 mm of the outer edge of the vehicle.
Also, HID "upgrades" have recently been deemed illegal over here. Too many people were fitting cheap and nasty aftermarket kits which can cause terrible dazzle to oncoming traffic. In UK we have to put our vehicles through an annual safety check known as the MOT test. If the vehicle fails, it can't be driven until the defects are rectified and the insurance will also be deemed invalid. If you get caught driving without insurance they will impound your car. HID headlights mean an instant MOT test fail and there's no let out by trying to go elsewhere in an attempt to pass - everything is now on a computer database and once the fault is on there, there is no hiding it. If you drive without the test certificate, there are now number plate recognition cameras linked to the database computer, they are at service stations, fitted to police cars, everywhere.
WOW.
And I thought California regulated everything to death.
Isn't that the case already? I know I'm already breaking some obscure law or other pretty much every minute of the day. Selective enforcement is where the real power is. You can harass anyone at any time for SOMETHING.One of the dubious benefits of living in Europe is that we are at the mercy of faceless rule makers. Faceless rule makers have to justify their existence by making more and more rules. Eventually, we will all become criminals because it will be impossible to avoid breaking some rule or other.