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Nov 26, 2022 12:14:43 GMT
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So Comrade Khan has announced the ULEZ zone will cover all of the Greater London area from August next year. that essentially equates to inside the M25
So unless your car meets relevant Euro standards it will be £12.50 a day to go into GL never mind the Congestion Zone if you have to go inside the North/South circulars. I moved out in the early 80's but my Mum still lives there so its £12.50 a trip unless i go in the Boxster 3.2 S which weirdly is exempt
From a Retro-Rides point of view if yoiu live within the new ULEZ its going to be expensive just to use one occasionally unless its a 40+ year old classic.
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Last Edit: Nov 26, 2022 12:25:58 GMT by duggers
Needs a bigger hammer mate.......
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Nov 26, 2022 12:34:45 GMT
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I live just outside the m25 and have heared many stories of how this is going to effect people. It's pretty much made going inside the m25 a no go zone for me. Until I get a 40+ year old car and put a stinky diesel in it apparently.
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Nov 26, 2022 16:04:45 GMT
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I'm currently fighting a £750 fine for nipping into London in her worshipfulness' pick up. I thought I had paid all the charges, but foolishly my fat fingers typed the registration number in wrong, so now I've got to find another £750 from somewhere. This makes the cheap second hand film scanner I picked up considerably more than the price of of a brand new one. I'm pretty much done with going to London now.
The trouble is, this will obviously happen more and more in other towns and cities across the UK.
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ChasR
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Nov 26, 2022 16:10:34 GMT
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I can see this thread potentially being shut down, for being ranty, so I will add some clarity to this.
Not all retros (bar 40+ year old cars) will be banned. Some of the newer stuff will be allowed in, where the following is compliant:
Petrol: Euro 4 (NOx) Diesel: Euro 6 (NOx and PM)
The NO limit for the above are the same (0.8), with diesels inherently producing more NOx than an equivalent petrol.
As a result, some Euro 2/3 petrols will be allowed in, as the NOx emissions still fall within the Euro 4 guidelines. The NOx threasholds for the above are roughly the same, since diesels inherently produce more NOx emissions compared to a petrol
As examples of my current and previous cars and friend's cars which are compliant
-E46 M3 is ULEZ compliant and is Euro 3 -Mondeo ST220 is also ULEZ compliant, despite this being a dirtier and 'older tech' engine than the E46 M3, also Euro 3 -Saab 9-3 1.8t is compliant, albeit that is a Euro 4 car -Mate's E39 Alpina B10 is not compliant, despite being the same age as my M3, as most Alpinas did not have the emissions details in the logbook. However, with a Certificate of Conformity from Alpina, and then a V5 update, that is then compliant. -Mondeo 2.5T with the Volvo 5 pot is also compliant
That said
-E91 325d is not compliant, being a Euro 4 diesel -Dad's Mondeo TDCI is not, being a Euro 5 diesel, which isn't low enough on the NOx or PM. -Mate's Clio V6 is not, since the NOx emissions just pip the 0.08 limit, which is allowed under Euro 3
A handful of Euro 5 diesels are compliant, but they are few and far between.
To be fair, several cities outside of the UK have these zones and have done for years. My mate bought my Mondeo 2.5T off me, partially for this reason. Stuttgart does not allow most diesels, along with Paris, and several other cities. Diesels are also taxed very heavily. My M3 would be around £120 to tax over there and I think the Mondeo 2.5T is that much. My E91 would be closer to £400, if not more.
I feel for some of the businesses, but to be fair, after getting a motorbike, there are cleaner and superior ways to travel in comparison to a car IMHO.
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Last Edit: Nov 27, 2022 9:13:23 GMT by ChasR
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ChasR
RR Helper
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Nov 26, 2022 16:13:23 GMT
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I'm currently fighting a £750 fine for nipping into London in her worshipfulness' pick up. I thought I had paid all the charges, but foolishly my fat fingers typed the registration number in wrong, so now I've got to find another £750 from somewhere. This makes the cheap second hand film scanner I picked up considerably more than the price of of a brand new one. I'm pretty much done with going to London now. The trouble is, this will obviously happen more and more in other towns and cities across the UK. Andy Burnham mentioned this a while back. He was saying that councils are under huge pressures to reduce pollution but with less money in the pot. This means they have little choice but to charge. I think some get around it by adding in cycling lanes etc, with the expectation that folks will use these more. Coventry has done that, with very mixed results. Several have forgotten that it was going to have a charge applied, which is the sole reason why I kept my Mondeo 2.5T for as long as I did, working out on outskirts of Coventry. Anyway, time for pics of ULEZ exempt cars.
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Last Edit: Nov 27, 2022 9:15:06 GMT by ChasR
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Nov 26, 2022 16:49:12 GMT
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and you are entitled to your opinion , i just don't agree with it !
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Sammo
Club Retro Rides Member
Posts: 1,461
Club RR Member Number: 103
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Nov 26, 2022 16:56:44 GMT
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It's not just London that's affected. I live in Surbiton in Surrey and will fall into the new ULEZ area. My Mum and Nan live in Chessington in Surrey and their house also falls into the new zone! That means that my Nans garage which I use for working on my '85 E28 5 Series, '85 Austin Metro and '98 E36 3 Series is also going to be in the zone! I barely use any of these cars but now if I've worked on one and need to road test it after I'm going to have to pay £12.50 to take it off the driveway! However in three years time two of them will be exempt. Now how does that make any sense at all?!
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Follow Me On Instagram - @parttimecartinkerer
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Nov 26, 2022 17:13:12 GMT
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I only live a couple of miles outside the M25 so just checked my cars - VW T5 van, Mercedes C200, MGB - none are ULEZ compliant so £12.50 every time I drive one of those in the new extended zone. The only car I own which is ULEZ compliant is this..... :-)
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Currently driving a '68 Karmann Ghia as my daily. Don't ask about previous cars - there have been way too many and I stopped counting at 160!
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ChasR
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Nov 26, 2022 17:25:47 GMT
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I only live a couple of miles outside the M25 so just checked my cars - VW T5 van, Mercedes C200, MGB - none are ULEZ compliant so £12.50 every time I drive one of those in the new extended zone. The only car I own which is ULEZ compliant is this..... :-) I'd check the MGB again, as that should be exempt, being a historic car. Last MGB was made in 1980. If it's not exempt, a V111 or an online declaration should sort this. I may end up taking the M3 to my bro-in-law's in Croydon. The price difference between diesel and petrol is bigger now than it has been so it probably is in the favour of the M3 to go down.
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Last Edit: Nov 26, 2022 17:31:17 GMT by ChasR
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Nov 26, 2022 17:49:50 GMT
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It's not just London that's affected. I live in Surbiton in Surrey and will fall into the new ULEZ area. My Mum and Nan live in Chessington in Surrey and their house also falls into the new zone! That means that my Nans garage which I use for working on my '85 E28 5 Series, '85 Austin Metro and '98 E36 3 Series is also going to be in the zone! I barely use any of these cars but now if I've worked on one and need to road test it after I'm going to have to pay £12.50 to take it off the driveway! However in three years time two of them will be exempt. Now how does that make any sense at all?! If I go to my parents in Ewell and then go to Surbiton to get the train to town it'll cost me 12.50 in my daily (dirty diesel Range Rover Evoque), but won't cost in the Porsche 996. So guess I'll be using that then. Or the Datsun. Without derailing too much, frankly I think central London should essentially be pedestrianised. When I went to the office during Covid it was actually a pleasant place to be with almost no cars. The problem is that doesn't bring in the money to pay for the public transport requirements.
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Nov 26, 2022 18:44:18 GMT
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Historics which were 40 years old before 1973 are automatcaly exempt, those after have to be registered with tfl by sending them a copy of the v5 showing it is registered as historic. I'm about to do this for the TR7V8 and Elan, I don't go into london if I can avoid it but just incase we get diverted off the M25 at some point, I will have to pay for the Range Rover and MX5 if that happens, Street Ka is fine though.
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stealthstylz
Club Retro Rides Member
Posts: 14,961
Club RR Member Number: 174
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Nov 26, 2022 19:00:31 GMT
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Without derailing too much, frankly I think central London should essentially be pedestrianised. When I went to the office during Covid it was actually a pleasant place to be with almost no cars. The problem is that doesn't bring in the money to pay for the public transport requirements. Any time I drive in London I think the same thing. I dropped a engine off somewhere near Shoreditch (I think, was near Fenchurch station I recognised the names from Monopoly lol). Setting off at 9.30am it took me 2 hours flat to do 150 miles to South Mimm's, then over 1.5 hours to do the other 17 miles to where I was going and same back. It's barely quicker than walking most of the time and certainly not quicker than cycling/mobility scooter etc. The air is crazy bad too, if I go into Leeds centre it doesn't stink of fumes, London was like doing a bong full of soot.
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Nov 26, 2022 20:09:57 GMT
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For those not familiar with the area the problem with the expanded zone is it encompasess many suburban and even rural areas which are not well served (if at all) by public transport, basicaly if you need to go inside the M25 check because you would not believe some of the areas are part of a city congestion zone.
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Historics which were 40 years old before 1973 are automatcaly exempt, those after have to be registered with tfl by sending them a copy of the v5 showing it is registered as historic. Who are the TFL? As my 79 falls into this. Cheers
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Please don't throw litter, take it home.
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ChasR
RR Helper
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Nov 27, 2022 10:03:12 GMT
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Nov 27, 2022 18:16:58 GMT
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Does this include Heathrow Airport? I am an arch poluter - I drive to Heathrow in a big American car then fly long haul for business...
Weirdly, I was in South Africa again 2 weeks back and they charge higher rates of tax for electric cars to discourage their purchase.... Petrol ones are just fine.
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1941 Wolseley Not Rod - 1956 Humber Hawk - 1957 Daimler Conquest - 1966 Buick LeSabre - 1968 Plymouth Sport Fury - 1968 Ford Galaxie - 1969 Ford Country Squire - 1969 Mercury Marquis - 1970 Morris Minor - 1970 Buick Skylark - 1970 Ford Galaxie - 1971 Ford Galaxie - 1976 Continental Mark IV - 1976 Ford Capri - 1994 Ford Fiesta
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Nov 27, 2022 19:53:39 GMT
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I don’t understand why anyone would want to drive into ANY city never mind London. It’s a terrible experience
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Nov 27, 2022 20:03:33 GMT
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Does this include Heathrow Airport? I am an arch poluter - I drive to Heathrow in a big American car then fly long haul for business... Weirdly, I was in South Africa again 2 weeks back and they charge higher rates of tax for electric cars to discourage their purchase.... Petrol ones are just fine. Yes it is, might be worth condidering one of the off site parking places outside heathrow.
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Nov 27, 2022 20:41:55 GMT
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I don’t understand why anyone would want to drive into ANY city never mind London. It’s a terrible experience Because public transport is often a worse experience. (Or because they live there)
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1941 Wolseley Not Rod - 1956 Humber Hawk - 1957 Daimler Conquest - 1966 Buick LeSabre - 1968 Plymouth Sport Fury - 1968 Ford Galaxie - 1969 Ford Country Squire - 1969 Mercury Marquis - 1970 Morris Minor - 1970 Buick Skylark - 1970 Ford Galaxie - 1971 Ford Galaxie - 1976 Continental Mark IV - 1976 Ford Capri - 1994 Ford Fiesta
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Nov 27, 2022 20:43:21 GMT
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Does this include Heathrow Airport? I am an arch poluter - I drive to Heathrow in a big American car then fly long haul for business... Weirdly, I was in South Africa again 2 weeks back and they charge higher rates of tax for electric cars to discourage their purchase.... Petrol ones are just fine. Yes it is, might be worth condidering one of the off site parking places outside heathrow. Forwarned is forearmed. I'll still park onsite but so long as I know I have to pay some kind of charge to do so. My cars are all* ULEZ exempt so I guess I'll be OK or will there be the regular congestion charge on top as well?
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1941 Wolseley Not Rod - 1956 Humber Hawk - 1957 Daimler Conquest - 1966 Buick LeSabre - 1968 Plymouth Sport Fury - 1968 Ford Galaxie - 1969 Ford Country Squire - 1969 Mercury Marquis - 1970 Morris Minor - 1970 Buick Skylark - 1970 Ford Galaxie - 1971 Ford Galaxie - 1976 Continental Mark IV - 1976 Ford Capri - 1994 Ford Fiesta
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