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eBay tat volume 3.


Ross_K

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3 hours ago, MisterH said:

I'm sure it's been said here before, but there's more than a few chancers about who seem to think that rarity equals desirability.

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28 minutes ago, Quintus said:

I'm sure it's been said here before, but there's more than a few chancers about who seem to think that rarity equals desirability.

Oh I have no doubt he's a bit of a wannabe trader, description shows that he probably knows little about the car unfortunately. That will be kicking around for a while

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3 hours ago, MisterH said:

Oh I have no doubt he's a bit of a wannabe trader, description shows that he probably knows little about the car unfortunately. That will be kicking around for a while

It will snapped up very quickly - it's a very  straight low milage Sunbeam shell that needs minor work - its value is in its huge potential as a historic rally car base rather than it being a plain Jane Sunbeam 1.0. The car is being sold in North Wales - they fully know what and how the car will be used.  5k is pretty reasonable these days for a low milage Sunbeam for the rally boys.

images (12).jpeg

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7 hours ago, ProgRocker said:

Cortina mark 3 estate currently up to £6,102.

Image 3 - Ford Cortina Mk3 2.0 Estate complete with a good transferable reg number

phase 1 mark 3 2.0 estate

 

5 hours ago, cort16 said:

I think it’s the plate driving up the price of this . 

it will be one to watch for sure

because the DVLA have (thankfully) tightened things up with regards to the ability to rob a historic vehicle of its plate

for example regardless of the MOT exemption status of a vehicle with the DVSA, the DVLA require any historic vehicle that is being robbed of its plate to have a current MOT (and imagine if its been laid up for 40 years like the above, also an inspection)

so yeah good luck to the would be plate robbers! although I do wonder if this will magically gain a current MOT about 3 days after the auction ends LOL so yeah, again one to watch...

 

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7 hours ago, LightBulbFun said:

 

it will be one to watch for sure

because the DVLA have (thankfully) tightened things up with regards to the ability to rob a historic vehicle of its plate

for example regardless of the MOT exemption status of a vehicle with the DVSA, the DVLA require any historic vehicle that is being robbed of its plate to have a current MOT (and imagine if its been laid up for 40 years like the above, also an inspection)

so yeah good luck to the would be plate robbers! although I do wonder if this will magically gain a current MOT about 3 days after the auction ends LOL so yeah, again one to watch...

 

People say this, but I don't think it makes any difference in reality. We sold a car last year with a valuable plate on it and there was zero chance of it having an MoT without a full restoration, but the plate was taken off straight away and is now on retention. I'm not sure if somebody put a dodgy MoT on it or there is some other loophole in place.

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54 minutes ago, barrett said:

People say this, but I don't think it makes any difference in reality. We sold a car last year with a valuable plate on it and there was zero chance of it having an MoT without a full restoration, but the plate was taken off straight away and is now on retention. I'm not sure if somebody put a dodgy MoT on it or there is some other loophole in place.

I think thats because the rules only changed fairly recently, at some point between 2020 and 2022, before then a historic vehicle did not need an MOT, to transfer the plate off a vehicle it only needed to be of a type that required an MOT (so you could not plate rob Tractors, Milk floats and invalid carriages, etc not that the DVLA has actually adhered to that rule about the later *grumble* because people dont read their rules and regulations and realise that an invalid carriage under 306 Kg is not a vehicle type that needs an MOT!)

prior to the rule change all a vehicle had to be was continuously taxed and be of a type that required an MOT, and of course being a historic vehicle thats £NIL rate and you did not have to worry about MOT's either as long as it was of a type that normally would require an MOT it did not matter that it was exempt via age, so it was easy to rob a plate off a vehicle that had not seen the road in 30 years (basically just tax it and that was it)

and as such I saw it lead to a lot vehicles old vehicles (like yours I imagine), which had been laid up for 40 years, just being robbed of their plate and just chucked to one side having any residual value/hope in hell of being saved now robbed from it

so I am pleased to see the DVLA have done something about it, hence why it will be interesting to see what happened with the Ford! good fucking luck there is what I say to the plate robbers!  :) 

On 21/03/2022 at 14:17, LightBulbFun said:

as a side note I noticed the DVLA has updated its number plate transfer policy to specifically state that historic vehicles need an MOT still even if normally exempt

image.png.e74609f466c133680257fcb33a761395.png

if I go back to a web archive of the same page from 2020 its not there

image.png.62904637f320f7a4d836ee5de54a1a83.png

 

its nice to see the DVLA implement this, as it at least guarantees that a historic vehicle will be made road worthy (unless it gets a bent MOT of course) and stops people from just buying old vehicles just for their plate and punting them on un-restored etc

which was a big gripe of mine, if your going to rob a vehicle of its plate the least you can do is get it road worthy!

 

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