- Thu May 22, 2014 8:42 am
#35973
Jamie, you have described the MOT requirement perfectly, "as was when new". Basically the bike is Tested to the standard of the days it was made, (it would be stupid to test a drum brake like a modern 6 pot disc for instance!) but there is an exception: some bikes were originally supplied without brake lights, if your bike has a rear light it must have a brake light as well, but this only needs to work off the rear brake. Everything else must be mechanically sound, I won't list everything. There is a strange loophole in the regs: some items (eg speedo, chainguard,) are required in the Construction and Use Regulations but are not part of the MOT test. For your first test I recommend that you find an Old Bike friendly Tester (he needn't be old, I've met some perfectly sensible young Testers and some idiotically prescriptive ones too,) that will treat your bike with respect and hopefully talk you through it, they aren't obliged to do this by the way. Finally, your bike is now MOT exempt but I think you should get it tested anyway, we can all make mistakes. If you tell us where you are someone may be able to suggest a suitable Tester. Incidentally, your Tester need not be your nearest, as long as the appointment is booked he could be 100 miles away! REgards, Mark