It also allows one to find out what happened to previously owned vehicles. Now, I’m not very good at remembering old number plates – in fact my usual way of finding my own car is to click the remote locking fob and see which vehicle lights up. However I do recall a couple of old number plates. First up was our old Nissan which we parted company with in 2001 with 150,000 miles on the clock and a rather knackered gearbox. I had wondered whether this was scrapped or repaired and it does appear that this was the latter. The MOT histories start in 2006 and the Nissan failed it with a huge list of emissions related issues at 171,000 miles and then passed 3 days later – presumably with a replacement lambda sensor. The last entry was a pass at 174,000 miles a year later so I expect it was finally scrapped sometime after that. Still, it looks like someone managed to get some use out of it for another 7 years and 25,000 miles after we parted company with it.
Written off? |
It first shows up in July 2016 with another 8,000 miles on it and illegally worn front tyres. This is quite some wear as the tyres were practically new at the time it was written off so I would expect some sort of fundamental wheel misalignment must have been going on. It also had mis-aimed headlights and a duff indicator bulb. It seems to have clocked up the miles quite happily until 2009 at 108,000 miles. By the next June this was magically down to 75,000. Then it put on another 5 thousand miles and failed on some remarkably similar items to the 2006 test. 2 days later it passed again but with another 20,000 miles missing (although that could have been a mistype by the garage). I’m assuming that it was put out of its misery sometime after that as that is the last we hear of it.
The great thing about the DVLA facility is that it allows a prospective car buyer to check all this in advance and I think anyone seeing the Honda’s history would have been alerted to a chequered history. However, I do think it would make sense to combine this with histories of serious accidents. The fact that a relatively new and valuable car was written off should have raised major alarm bells with potential buyers. Even taking that into account I think the facility is a great advance and, for once, government data is being used for the benefit of the people – at least the honest ones.
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