Originally posted by vetran
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The answer is "Yes" you can as it still has an MOT - the question was not "my car's a death trap can I take it on the public road and drive into a walking bus of primary school children". Driving a car with dangerous faults is another question. Specifically when you're answer started telling him "it's all computerised" - you implied that this failure will look up on the PNC. There are very strict rules about garages not being allowed to tell the police you're removing a car be it in a dangerous condition or not from them for repair.
Also MOTs are subjective - the tester is the one who decides if they pass or fail - lots of the parts of its are based on "excessive" or "substantial". Take it to another MOT tester and it'll probably pass. This doens't suddenly change the car from being unroadworty to being the safest thing on four wheels.
If you really believe that "It won't be roadworthy" just because it doesn't have an MOT then you are wrong. The MOT and being roadworthy are different things and have different criteria. For example the MOT emissions are based on a specific quantity of part per million. To get a ticket from the police they and the vehicle examiners base it on "excessive smoke" these are not the same thing.
A car can fail an MOT because a seatbelt doesn't retract, not having the postcode of where made your number plate on it....that's an MOT failure, the ABS doesn't work effectively giving you standard brakes it'll fail (but if you remove the ABS system giving you standard brakes it'll pass). A motorbike can fail an MOT for not having pillion foot pegs if its classified as a two seater - even if you never intend to take passengers they still have to be there.
None of these faults will get you a driving a vehicle in an un-roadworthy condition conviction but will fail an MOT. In future you might want to listen to people that work in the industry and not websites designed to sell a service.
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