Friday, October 30, 2020

Tyres over 10 years old will be banned on heavy vehicles

The rules will apply to HGVs and PSVs and extend to minibuses.

An refrigerated lorry

Tyres over 10 years old will be banned on heavy vehicles

Earlier this year, the government announced that tyres aged 10 years and older will be banned on the front axles of lorries, buses and coaches.

You can read the full story in the Department for Transport's news article.

DVSA already checks for tyres aged 10 years and older during roadside enforcement stops. This change in the law will allow us to issue prohibitions if these tyres are found at annual test and enforcement checks.

What is changing?

From February 2021, it will become illegal to fit tyres aged 10 years or older to:

  • the front axle of a goods vehicle with a maximum gross weight exceeding 3,500 kg
  • the front axle of a bus or coach - including minibuses
  • the rear axle of a minibus with single rear wheels fitted

What this means for these vehicles at annual test

Tyres that are aged 10 years and older will become a failure item at annual test.

If these tyres do not display a date code, they will also fail.

As part of the annual test, our Vehicle Standards Assessors (VSAs) will check that each tyre displays a date of manufacture or re-treading.

What this means for our enforcement checks

Once the rules change, if our roadside enforcement teams find a tyre aged 10 years or older fitted to the front axle of a relevant vehicle, they will issue an 'S' mark prohibition and conduct a follow up investigation.

What happens next?

We will publish updates to the guide to maintaining roadworthiness, categorisation of defects and MOT inspection manual before the new legislation comes into force.

In the lead up to the ban, VSAs will start to identify tyres aged 10 years or older on HGVs, alongside their existing checks on PSVs.

They'll share this information with vehicle presenters and drivers to help raise awareness of the new rules.

We will update you with more information ahead of the change in the law being introduced.

This new rule will help improve road safety and follows work undertaken by government and the determined efforts of campaigners.


This email was sent to ooseims.archieves@blogger.com using GovDelivery Communications Cloud on behalf of: Driver and Vehicle Standards Agency · Berkeley House, Croydon Street · Bristol, BS5 0DA · 0300 123 9000  GovDelivery logo

No comments:

Post a Comment