T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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934.1 | on and then off | MARVIN::RUSLING | MicroServer Phase V Session Control | Tue Jan 23 1990 13:01 | 7 |
| I don't know the exact regulations. You are correct, dim dips were introduced
in early 87. All cars registered after April of 87 had to have dim dips. Of
course, this included kits registered. However, after about 3 or 4 months,
the legislation was dropped. Apparently Britain jumped the gun on a European
directive and go its wrists slapped. I'm not sure if it has been reintroduced.
Dave
|
934.2 | but still in.... | UKCSSE::RDAVIES | Live long and prosper | Tue Jan 23 1990 13:43 | 4 |
| They're still building all new cars to that spec!. (even the ones
imported).
Richard
|
934.3 | For what its worth... | SUBURB::PARKER | | Tue Jan 23 1990 13:51 | 34 |
| I am surer on rear lights than fronts, so I will start there.
You must have a rear marker light, a brake light, a reflector and
a turn indicator each side, of specific sizes and powers. The rear
marker and brake light may be combined in a two filament bulb, and
must be red. The reflector must also be red, and the turn indicator
must be amber. There are regulations as to how far from the side
of the car and how high they may be mounted. Additionally there
must be at least one high intensity rear lamp for use in fog etc.
This may be included in the cluster, but if it is it may not be
closer than (I think) 100mm (about 4" in English) from the brake
light. Some manufacturers (Sierras, for instance) combine the rear
marker and the fog lamps, and mount the brake lamp 100mm away -
this separates the brake and rear markers to make it more obvious
that some stopping is going on. I believe that reversing lamps are
still optional.
At the front, sidelights, and headlights must be fitted, at defined
distances from the side (hence the remounting of the headlights
on Landies some years ago) and between 2' and 3'6" from the deck
(they might have metricated those). The dip beams must not dazzle
someone a defined distance away at a defined height (can't remeber
the figures). The dim-dip must come into play whilst the car is
in motion; thus on my BX, if I try to drive on sidelights, the
dim-dipped heads automatically cut in. You also need amber indicators
at the front. Other lights are optional, but if beams are fitted
below 2', they may only be used in fog or falling snow. Movable
lights, like those sometimes mounted on roofs, may not be used on
a moving vehicle.
Unless, of course, you know better - all the above strictly from
memory - E&OE.
Steve
|
934.4 | We're getting there...
| IOSG::MARSHALL | Scott Marshall | Tue Jan 23 1990 14:01 | 11 |
| Some useful info here, thanks. The lights business is more complex than I
thought, which leads me to think other areas are going to be equally full of
bureaucracy. I assume I can find all the info in "Construction and Use"
regulations; any ideas where I can find these though?
In case you're interested, I want to know all this 'cos I intend building a car
(specifically, a Moss Roadster). The only thing stopping me is I have nowhere
to build it. If anyone has a garage I could rent for a few months, please let
me know!!
Ta, Scott.
|
934.5 | | MARVIN::COCKBURN | Promoting International Unity | Tue Jan 23 1990 14:18 | 6 |
| Also, if you only have one foglight, it must be located at the RHS of the
car if it's a country where you drive on the left. This begs the question,
if I have a car with only one foglight, is is legal to use the foglight
when I'm driving in a country where they drive on the other side of the road?
Craig.
|
934.6 | You could have a fair bit of reading to do | JANUS::BARKER | Jeremy Barker - Reading, England | Tue Jan 23 1990 15:20 | 16 |
| Re: .4
> Some useful info here, thanks. The lights business is more complex than I
> thought, which leads me to think other areas are going to be equally full of
> bureaucracy. I assume I can find all the info in "Construction and Use"
> regulations; any ideas where I can find these though?
You actually need the Road Vehicle Lighting Regulations. There may also be
some parts of the C&U Regs that apply to lights.
The reference section on Reading Public Library has a large volume on road
traffic law that includes all the relevant acts and regulations and also
comments on cases that have gone to the higher courts. The title is of
the form "Xxxxxx on Road Traffic" (I can't remember what Xxxxxx is though).
jb
|
934.7 | Written down regulations. | SHAPES::STREATFIELDC | WIZARD STUFF | Tue Jan 23 1990 15:50 | 11 |
| When I recently fitted a Fog light to the back of my old VW, I had to
buy an "accessory kit" which comprised of a relay, wires, switch
connectors etc, and an instruction leaflet saying exactly where, and
how far apart, and how bright,high, colour etc. the lights should be
installed on the car.
You can get the kits in Halfords in a small blue and yellow box next to
the accessory spot lights etc.
I will see if I have thrown mine away tonite!
Carl.
|
934.9 | | SUBURB::PARKER | | Wed Jan 24 1990 09:26 | 6 |
| Do you seriously mean that your car is 1'11" or less high?
Why do you think Caterham 7s et al have the lights in pods mounted
on top of the mudguards (atleast, I think they are...)
Steve
|
934.10 | We look UP to the back axle of minis! | IOSG::MITCHELL | Elaine | Wed Jan 24 1990 09:59 | 4 |
|
re -1 >> Do you seriously mean that your car is 1'11" or less high?
yes - (the roll bar is a bit higher though! :-) )
|
934.11 | | SUBURB::PARKER | | Wed Jan 24 1990 10:29 | 1 |
| So mount them on the roll bar! :-)
|
934.12 | Watch out for that Christmas tree! :-) | IOSG::MITCHELL | Elaine | Wed Jan 24 1990 13:36 | 6 |
|
Aren't headlights supposed to be at the front of the car - rather than
2/3rds along its length: :-) - or maybe the rules don't actually state
that!
ELaine :-)
|
934.13 | | SUBURB::PARKER | | Wed Jan 24 1990 14:43 | 9 |
| Well, they have to _point_ forwards, but I dont remember any rules
about how far from the front they have to be.
There are plenty of cars with pop-up lights, which are a foot or
so from the front, and I seem to recall an Italian show special
some years back which had the lights behind the driver (it was some
kind of Barchetta or summat.
Steve
|
934.14 | | SHAPES::STREATFIELDC | WIZARD STUFF | Wed Jan 24 1990 15:04 | 4 |
| I think you will find that in that case you have to have "marker
lights" or side lights within certain distances of each corner of the
car.
|
934.15 | | VOGON::KAPPLER | John Kappler | Wed Jan 24 1990 15:45 | 13 |
| Aside to the Mitchells........
Beware. If your vehicles headlights are below the 2' mark, sooner or
later you will get stopped and nicked. The traffic cops are very hot on
knowing the rules, and I have personal experience of a car that was
illegal this way.
And it doesn't have to be dark.....
JohnK
p.s. Are you sure you've put the kit on the right chassis and
suspension?
|
934.16 | Traffic Cops know the rules? | MARVIN::RUSLING | MicroServer Phase V Session Control | Wed Jan 24 1990 15:50 | 7 |
| I think most policemen don't have a clue about the Construction and Use
regulations. I've been around Kit Cars for the last 3 1/2 years and I've never
heard of anyone being nicked. The only traffic cop I know backs me up on this.
If you want to know most of the relevent details, see the RAC handbook, there's
a section in the front of that.
Dave
|
934.18 | Which rules do these people follow? | IOSG::MITCHELL | Elaine | Wed Jan 24 1990 18:31 | 8 |
|
As an aside to this - if the rules say that the lights should be a
certain height above the road, how come the car has an MOT, and
(probably more relevant) passed the inspections necessary before it
could be registered?
Elaine
|
934.19 | | CURRNT::SAXBY | Isn't it 5.30 yet? | Thu Jan 25 1990 09:10 | 12 |
|
Pah! MOT
At Sandown Park last year two cars from the Marcos Club were initially
disqualified from taking in part in the concourse. One because it
had no front number plate and the other because the wheels were
extending outside the bodywork (when viewed from above). Both these
cars had current (and past) MOTs.
What does that tell you?
Mark
|
934.20 | :-) | SWEEP::ALFORD | Fantasy is the reality of life... | Thu Jan 25 1990 09:41 | 2 |
|
the people at Sandown are pernickerty ?
|
934.21 | | CURRNT::SAXBY | Isn't it 5.30 yet? | Thu Jan 25 1990 09:46 | 7 |
|
Maybe, but they are also right!
BTW the car without the number plate had one made up and won best
car at the show!
Mark
|
934.22 | C&U versus MOT | MARVIN::RUSLING | MicroServer Phase V Session Control | Thu Jan 25 1990 11:00 | 32 |
| It tells me what I already know. There are two sets of rules here, (1) the
construction and use regulations and (2) the MOT testing criteria. The
construction and use regulations specify how a car must be built in order to
be comply with current vehicle law. The MOT is a set of safety checks that is
at least 3 years out of date. The MOT may reflect the construction and use
regulations (eg where the car was registered post front seat belts those belts
will be checked). However, there are some things that are not covered by an
MOT, such as the edges of the wheels protruding past the bodywork.
Additionally, some MOT'ers are more thorough than others (there is scope for
opinion and interpretation), I think that there is a general section of the
MOT that they can use to fail strange cars (I'll look at my MOT test form
and find out).
As far as lights go, they are testing for alignment not positioning and, as long
as their test equipement will do the job (ie go low enough) then they'll pass
the car.
Other countries require an engineer's inspection before allowing a kit to become
registered (such as Australia). However, engineers often demand a high price
for this and this puts up the cost of a kit. In this country, for now, the
Government (and the insurance companies) trust the kit builder. One critisism
that has been leveled at some kit companies is that they have produced designs
that plain don't meet the Construction and Use Regulations. "STATUS" is a body
that a lot of kit makers belong to and one of its aims is to spread the word, so
if you have any questions, maybe ringing STATUS is a good plan ('phone number in
the kit magazines). Some owner's clubs (eg Marlin) have a designated C&U expert
who you can 'phone.
Of course, if you manage to retain the donor's registration, then the C&U regs
for its year of registration will apply.
Dave
|
934.23 | No flashers here please! | TRON::MARSHALL | Scott, who wants to rent a garage but can't find one... | Thu Jan 25 1990 15:10 | 38 |
| Getting back to the original point of this note...
I went into the library at lunchtime, and found a book with a precis of
the C&U and lighting regs (I couldn't find the regs themsleves), and
there are so many bizarre rules, I estimate the majority of cars break
the law in some way, and as for kit cars...
Among the more interesting points on lights were (accuracy not
guaranteed - this is all from memory):
- "Side lights" are officially called "front position lights" and must be
within 400mm of the edge of the car (no I won't give the three page
definition of "the edge of the car") and within a certain height range.
- Rear lights must include indicator, brake and tail light and must be:
- not more than 400mm from edge of car
- lights on one side not nearer than 500mm to lights on other side,
unless the car is less than 1400mm wide
- minimum height from ground 350mm, maximum 1200mm, unless the car
has no suitable mounting point in this range (NB might this apply
to the Noble's headlights?)
- rear reflector must be mounted vertically and mustn't be triangular
- Dim/dip or "running lights" to be 10-20% of headlight brightness
(unless this is not practicable)
- Dim/dip to be on whenever engine is on (or "key is in the on position")
- From late 1990 cars must have "marker lights" at each corner; doesn't
specify whether tail and sidelights can serve a dual purpose.
- All cars must have a side mounted indicator within 2600mm of the front
The main thing to note is that virtually every rule has exclusions,
exceptions and special cases so as long as you have the right number of
lights at the right end of the car you can probably get away with it.
I'm still unsure about the dim/dip business. If the origianl rule was
invoked, it has definitely now been reinstated. The rule implies the car
must have front lights on all the time, yet I do not see lights on cars
during the day. Anyone with a new-ish (April 1987 ->) car who can say
whether their lights automatically come on when they start the car
(even if the headlight switch is off) please let me know!
Scott "I assure you it's legal officer".
|
934.24 | Just look at the cars on the road | TRON::MITCHELL | Elaine | Thu Jan 25 1990 15:56 | 4 |
| I'm sure our 1989 Maestro efi has NO lights on, unless you specifically
switch them on.
ELaine
|
934.25 | Very Dim Dips | MARVIN::RUSLING | MicroServer Phase V Session Control | Thu Jan 25 1990 16:27 | 2 |
| Also, if you do fit dim dips into a wiring circuit not intended for them, don't
buy the cheap version that heats up during use...
|
934.26 | Mine don't | IJSAPL::CAMERON | Yesterday was worse than tomorrow | Fri Jan 26 1990 06:40 | 11 |
| Re. New-ish, post April 1987 cars....
Well my 200SX is 7 weeks old so I guess that's new-ish and the
lights definetely don't come on unless specifically ordered to.
I would be interested to hear of any car that has this 'feature'.
The neighbour's got a new Volvo 740 and his lights don't automatically
come on, mind you he is an auto-electrician by trade...
Gordon
|
934.27 | | CHEFS::CLEMENTSD | Public Sector and Telecomms | Fri Jan 26 1990 08:47 | 14 |
|
Re -1.......
As aSAAB driver of 6 years I got used to being regailed by others
who thought I had left my lights on during the day. Of course Swedish
law says Daylights are required in Sweden so you can have them in
the UK. The manual did tell you which fuse to extract if you didn't
want them on!
But ........ it would seem that Current models don't have daylights
in the UK. I can't believe that EVERY driver of a G reg SAAB has
taken the fuse out. But the same doesn't seem to apply to Volvo's
as they still wire them up.
|
934.29 | Definitive Answer... | TRON::MARSHALL | Scott "Wanted: Garage to rent" | Fri Jan 26 1990 10:42 | 17 |
| I've done what I should have done in the first place; found a new car (my mum's;
I didn't break into one!) and played with the lights to see what happens, so:
With the ignition off:
Turn on sidelight switch: sidelights come on
Turn on headlight switch: nothing else happens
With the ignition on:
Turn on sidelight switch: sidelights and dim headlights come on
Turn on headlight switch: headlights come on
I don't see that a special (ie costs money) dim/dip unit is necessary. The
wiring can be arranged so that the headlight bulbs are in series (ie 6 volts
across each, hence quarter power) when the sidelights and ignition are on. Can
anyone think of a good reason why this shouldn't be done?
Scott "headlamps with candles in them are best"
|
934.30 | Variatinosd on a theme, but no run-time lights | UKCSSE::RDAVIES | Live long and prosper | Fri Jan 26 1990 11:11 | 16 |
| re .29, sticking them in series means if one filament blows you loose
both lights, illegal!. Most systems use a resistor switched in/out by
relays.
re your configuration, mine's similar except...
With the ignition off:
Turn on sidelight switch: sidelights come on
Turn on headlight switch: headlights come on <<<<<
Turn OFF sidelight switch: NO lights
With the ignition on:
Turn on sidelight switch: sidelights and dim headlights come on
Turn on headlight switch: headlights come on
Turn OFF sidelight switch: NO lights
Richard
|
934.31 | | SWEEP::ALFORD | Fantasy is the reality of life... | Fri Jan 26 1990 13:05 | 13 |
|
Mine's much simpler :-)
With the ignition off:
Turn on sidelight switch: sidelights come on
Turn on headlight switch: headlights come on
With the ignition on:
Turn on sidelight switch: sidelights come on
Turn on headlight switch: headlights come on
|
934.32 | The next gripping instalment... | YORICK::MARSHALL | Scott "Wanted: Garage to rent" | Fri Jan 26 1990 13:13 | 18 |
| OK, so if one filament blows, just switch the headlights on proper (ie wired in
parallel, 12v each) and at least one will work. I don't usually drive on
sidelights anyway. If course, I am sure all readers of this conference carry
spare bulbs with them just in case...
Regarding using a resistor to dim the lights, this is fine except it wastes
power, the resistor dissipating heat. This isn't so much a problem these days,
but I used to own a car where it was very hard to keep the battery charged up!
You mention relays; are car lights generally switched by relays, the dashboard
switches carrying low current to activate these relays? I see no problem with
using higher-rated dash switches and connecting these directly to the lights.
It's only 12v after all; I might think again if it was higher!
By the way, I'm still looking for a garage; there must be someone with a burning
desire to let me build a car in theirs? I'll even let you help build it...
Scott "don't touch the dashboard - it's live"
|
934.33 | | UKCSSE::RDAVIES | Live long and prosper | Fri Jan 26 1990 13:43 | 38 |
|
>> <<< Note 934.32 by YORICK::MARSHALL "Scott "Wanted: Garage to rent"" >>>
-< The next gripping instalment... >-
>> OK, so if one filament blows, just switch the headlights on proper (ie wired in
>> parallel, 12v each) and at least one will work.
The idea is to use them in POOR visibility, not when headlamps are
necessarilly needed but when more than sidelights are needed. How would
you know it's gone in these circumstances??.
>>Regarding using a resistor to dim the lights, this is fine except it wastes
>>power, the resistor dissipating heat.
Should end up using about the same power as if the lights are on full,
the law was designed to prevent anybody driving deliberately on
sidelights, not save electricity.
>> This isn't so much a problem these days,but I used to own a car
>> where it was very hard to keep the battery charged up!
Fix this first, then fit DD :-)
>>You mention relays; are car lights generally switched by relays, the dashboard
>>switches carrying low current to activate these relays? I see no problem with
>>using higher-rated dash switches and connecting these directly to the lights.
>>It's only 12v after all; I might think again if it was higher!
Not necessarilly, though many modern manufacturers do. There is a
certain amount of 'logic' involved in achieving dim dip, it easier to
do it with relays rather than modify the switch fitted as standard in
the rest of the world. Also it's not the volts at the dash, it's the
amps. you need meaty contacts to drive a decent set of headlights
without burning up, and the switch mechanism can be smaller and lighter
if it's only carrying 'control' current.
Richard
|
934.34 | what i was told... | TASTY::WHITMARSH | Kevin - uk South Region @USH 849-3293 | Tue Jan 30 1990 11:47 | 12 |
|
when i was building my kit car, my suppliers told me that the
headlamps had to be dim-dipped when the engine was running, not
just when the ignition was on and i believe my ford sierra works
that way - ie the engine has to be turning before the dim-dip
works.
Incidently i never got round to wiring up the kit for dim-dip
and have never had any problems with MOTs or the law.
cheers
kevin
|
934.35 | The usual interpretation confusion! | UKCSSE::RDAVIES | Live long and prosper | Tue Jan 30 1990 16:15 | 9 |
| Well several cars I've seen recently, (New Cavalier, New BX, New 405)
have them come on with ignition, irrelevant whether engine running.
(Actually it'd be pretty difficult to have them NOT on with the engine
running then :-) )
So it looks like different interpretations again, e.g. law says whilst
engine running, interpretation ONLY when running not when stopped.
Richard
|
934.36 | Legal Confusion... | IOSG::MARSHALL | Scott "Wanted: Garage to rent" | Thu Feb 01 1990 10:21 | 29 |
| The law does actually say the following:
When the sidelights are on, and the engine is on or the key/switch is in the
position in which the engine could be on, then the dim/dip must be on.
(Or words to that effect).
So even if the engine isn't running, if the ignition is on the dim/dip must be
on. To my mind, it seems easier to arrange this than to worry about whether the
engine is turning over.
Another slant to the argument. The dim/dip applies to cars registered in
England since April 1987. My brother has a 1969 car, imported to the UK last
year (1989) and registered in England then. It was given a 1969 registration
(ie XXX XXX G), and thus didn't need dim/dip to be legal. Perhaps more
significant, it still has the American rear indicators (ie red brake lights
flash, instead of separate orange lights), and has passed an English MOT with
these, which are DEFINITELY illegal (any suggestions why they might be legal?)
I recently read an article in which a 1938 car had been restored, but although
British registered already, needed to have the lights changed to comply with
current legislation before it could legally be used.
So it appears the law is a complete shambles and waste of time!
Kit cars are given Q plates (ie of indeterminate age), so how can it be decided
which legislation should apply to them? I was in one recently which although
only 6 years old, had no seatbelts at all; the builder had convinced the LVLO
it was only a "minor modification" to the donor, a 1963 Triumph Vitesse, so
didn't need to conform to new legislation!
Scott.
|
934.37 | Date of registration still counts. | MARVIN::RUSLING | MicroServer Phase V Session Control | Thu Feb 01 1990 17:07 | 25 |
| Kits must adhere to the rules in force on the date of registration. The
fact that they always get a Q registration prefix does not make any difference.
[aside: will it swap to a Q suffix when the lettering system wraps around?].
Mine was registered in August 1987, it must adhere to the legislation in force
then.
The rules say that you may retain the donor registration if there is more than
60% of the original donor in the kit. How technical your registration authority
is will dictate how much you can get away with. When the inspector inspected
mine it was only half built and she wouldn't have known that there wasn't 60% of
the donor in it. Hands up all of you who think Cortinas have chassis! I know
of several Marlin Berlinettas without a Q registration.
So, you can get away with it. Another dodge I've heard of is to register
successive changes to the original car. Colour, engine, seating and so on. By
the time you've built your kit, you'll have changed everything. However, if
you have an accident and try and claim some insurance money, you may get
found out and, as insurance companies don't pay up unless they have to, you
may lose out.
I know of someone who got an MG TF through its MOT even though it had no
signalling light visible to the driver for its indicators. He pointed out that
the charge indication dial flickered every time the indicator came on...
Dave
|