NealB
Well-Known Member
When towing an empty dinghy trailer, if the car's rear lights and number plate are clearly visible, do I need to fit the trailer board?
Thanks!
Thanks!
Last edited:
When towing an empty dinghy trailer, if the car's rear lights and number plate are clearly visible, do I need to fit the trailer board?
But doesn't the trailer still have to have rear position lamps, retro-reflective triangles and an illuminated number plate?
I think just as cars can have daytime-only MOTs.
Never heard of such a thing. Please enlighten us.
A vehicle with no lights fitted (not no lights working) can get an MOT with the proviso that it may only be used during daylight hours. Quite common in the motorbike world.
Great! Another Solo sailor.
Not if it was manufactured before 1/10/1990.
Road Vehicle Lighting Regulations 1989 Part 1, Regulation 6, Paragraph (5):
No trailer manufactured before 1st October 1990 is required by regulation 18 to be fitted with any stop lamp or direction indicator whilst being drawn by a motor vehicle fitted with one or two stop lamps and two or more direction indicators if the dimensions of the trailer are such that when the longitudinal axes of the drawing vehicle and the trailer lie in the same vertical plane such stop lamps and at last one direction indicator on each side of the vehicle are visible to an observer in that vertical plane from a point 6 m behind the rear of the trailer whether it is loaded or not.
Later trailer are covered by regulation 18 and the various schedules.