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Help please down rating from 4.6ton


chopper brown
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Down plating - change the plate, no mechanical changes.

 

Down rating - mechanically alter the vehicle to change its weight carrying ability, and then change the plate.

 

As to the reasons why you would do either, thats a bit more complicated!

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This will sound like a mad question but which is worst in the eyes of the law.

 

1. a 4.6 tonne down plated to 3.5 tonne but still weigh at road side 4.6 tonne

 

or

 

2. a 4.6 tonne weighing 4.6 tonne but no operators licence and no down plate.

 

Equally bad, the first is a premeditated attempt to circumvent licensing laws, the second could be an honest mistake but if you get caught operating without an O licence it will be difficult to get an application approved later.

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BUT, why would one make mechanical changes to the vehicle if one is willing to state that one is going to operate within the new weight limit.

And risk a conviction if caught running over the plated weight.

Unless in some way to save a few kg in self weight as some fractional payback.

I can see absolutly no reason to down rate.

Or rather the suggestion that one can down rate but not down plate?

But my understanding, per a very cordial phone call a few years ago to the gentleman who "took" the overweight proscutions here in Northern Ireland)

The plate is the weight.

Its ALL about the plate.

Which is easily checked back against the DVLA registeration docs.

By downrating as I understand it, from contributions above, one would merely be making the vehile needlessly less safe?

And yes our 7500kg Iveco is a down rated/down plated 11,000kg truck.

IN that the engine, transmission and chassis are exactly the same as the 11000kg varient.

But the 7500kg was factory fitted with smaller/lighter axles and wheels, this to allow a measly 3050kg of tipper payload.

Wheras a purpose designed from the drawing board tipper 7500kg, (without a needlessly heavier chassis good for 11,000kg,) could have nearer 4000kg payload.

gibber

mutter

an

twitch

Edited by difflock
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BUT, why would one make mechanical changes to the vehicle if one is willing to state that one is going to operate within the new weight limit.

And risk a conviction if caught running over the plated weight.

Unless in some way to save a few kg in self weight as some fractional payback.

I can see absolutly no reason to down rate.

Or rather the suggestion that one can down rate but not down plate?

But my understanding, per a very cordial phone call a few years ago to the gentleman who "took" the overweight proscutions here in Northern Ireland)

The plate is the weight.

Its ALL about the plate.

Which is easily checked back against the DVLA registeration docs

 

simple,

my currant daily was a 6.5t tipper the l/a that operrated it had it down plated to 6t to increase its towing capasity to 2,250t plant trailer & equipment ,leaving a payload of 2.5t ,:001_smile:

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