RE: Personalised plates: Tell Me I'm Wrong
RE: Personalised plates: Tell Me I'm Wrong
Author
Discussion

goldblum

10,272 posts

193 months

Tuesday 21st May 2013
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Pleasingly there's far fewer plates here in South Cheshire now as most of the footballers who used to live in the area have moved nearer to Manchester where the garish and 'desperate' (lol) mansions they so enjoy showing off are more tolerated by their respective local councils. Win/win.

dingocooke

670 posts

246 months

Tuesday 21st May 2013
quotequote all
I really can't see what the fuss is about; if you like them, buy them, if you dont, well just don't! It hurts nobody, and keeps a few people gainfully employed trading plates, making plates etc, and the money the DVLA makes is almost total profit, and a gift to the state coffers.

If a plate makes no difference, why are Q plates (even on otherwise fabulous cars and bikes) almost universally abhored?

My take, I do like to see a plate that is sympathetic to the cars age or appearance; for example I have had (although never bought) a couple of age related plates on cobra replicas that make them look more period, and I think plates like the GTR one featured look good too.
I do laugh at how many northern ireland 'DAZ' numbers there are around, is there any such thing as common individualism??? :-)
I also like the '100% stock as it left the dealer' look especially on something interesting and classic, original plate from the area etc

End of the day, whatever the plate, it doesnt change how they drive!!


threespires

4,446 posts

237 months

Tuesday 21st May 2013
quotequote all
I didn't know CH before he came to PH.
At first I liked him but now feel he's becoming more like Clarkson, a wind-up merchant who talks cobblers to gain a reaction.
If the registration number on a car upsets people they must be quite narrow minded. The plates bring in an enormous amount of tax money which is paid voluntarily, they harm nobody and give many folks a giggle.
Go back to drifting supercars round a corner Chris, you're quite good at that - this topic is banal.


Bemmer

1,195 posts

228 months

Tuesday 21st May 2013
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CRA1G said:
Well DVLA have a three day auction starting tomorrow with 1550 numbers up....! So there will be plenty more on the road to moan about...hehe and I'm sure some will sell for eye watering prices to very happy purchasers filling the secretary of state coffers....yesso a win win all round reallyclap
Wow 1550 numbers...........! That is a serious amount of revenue......! But yea if some one's happy to pay,the government will happily except........biglaugh

StottyZr

6,860 posts

189 months

Tuesday 21st May 2013
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I liken private plates to tatoos. Most of the time the only person who really likes it is the owner hehe

If you're going to get a private plate do it properly, M3 GTS on an M3 GTS is acceptable M3 HFG is poor.

clintthrust

36 posts

245 months

Tuesday 21st May 2013
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I had the bad fortune that my wife actually bought me two private plates. My name is Steve and my surname begins with H. She bought me B5 TEH and C5 TEH. I thought, "what the hell has that got to do with my name"? She explains, "just move the 5 to the T and space the EH and you will have B 5TE H, Steve H"
Oh dear God!. I put them on unspaced and have had to explain them ever since!. They do look quite good side by side but it has put me off them completely.
If I had SMH 1 then fair enough, I like that, but all these dodgy spaced plates are a step too far and cheapen the car.
I overheard a guy say that he had bought one for £85 and it was XIB 5564 or something. It was nothing to do with his name but "the neighbours think I'm loaded" Perhaps that has a lot to do with it??!!

AW111

9,674 posts

159 months

Tuesday 21st May 2013
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Lots of anger on both sides here - I'm loving it! coffee

Different rules here in Australia, and more choices, so fewer sad text speak plates (I thought "shell oil" on the calculator was hilarious, when I was 12).

I still see too many try-hard plates, but there are some good ones around - my favourite from years ago was a pink merc convertible with the rego "kept".

Work has "DYNO-1" through to "DYNO-13" or so; many companies do similar.


Simanya

5 posts

214 months

Tuesday 21st May 2013
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I do see the argument here and regrettably I am guilty as charged - I have a few plates, mostly on retention; some are borderline offensive like 'S15 _ _ _' (then three letters like 'Si's VTR' if it was on a Citroen). The others are expensive two letters two numbers etc. BUT I'd say there were a formula to apply here. I used to have '55 ME' on an SL55 AMG which looked great but sold the number for a good margin. Sad - but true. Sorry.

Here's my rules:

1. If it's a beautiful car from say the 90's, like an NSX, a nice prefix plate with one digit and three letters (i.e. N2 NSX) looks cool rather than say, N589 RRV,
2. If it's an elegant classic with a nice plate - 60/70's Aston, Bentley etc
3. If it's just initials like SR 17 (nice) rather than S7 ROG (for an imaginary Steve Rogers) - on the RIGHT car e.g a Range Rover not a boy racer Subaru or Cosworth type car
4. If it's a heirloom

BUT I do hate fixings and letter edits to make it look like words i.e N1 OKS with a dot on the O so the O looks like a C etc just - wrong. Otherwise, I think prvate plates are elegant for the right people. Arthur Daley types no, Nigel Havers types yes. I suppose that I sit somewhere in between the two but probably more Nigel than Arthur!

Miura Anjin

71 posts

187 months

Tuesday 21st May 2013
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I could never buy a UK private plate today. Too chavvy.
But 30 years ago...

Anyone in East Herts remember the chap who had a Peugeot T16 with the plate
OKP 1 G
and a 288 GTO with
BEG 41 T

?

Class.

type-r

18,708 posts

239 months

Tuesday 21st May 2013
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Private plates can be good, if they are subtle. One of my favourites:



Not everyone will get it. And that's the point!

Herbs

5,045 posts

255 months

Tuesday 21st May 2013
quotequote all
As with anything - moderation is the key. A lot of plates look awful but some look quite good.

Personally I have a 2 digit, 3 letter plate 60 LXD which I like as it looks a lot less cluttered on the car.

When I younger, someone locally had a Escort with K9 OR G which made me giggle everytime I saw it smile

MSportUK

133 posts

267 months

Tuesday 21st May 2013
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If it's done with a bit of humour, and isn't in some ridiculous script font, then i'm for it. These brought a smile to my face...




I do quite like the simplicity of the older, shorter plates too, like...



As with most things, if they're taken too seriously, to people use them try and look gangster, then they'll generally look a bit of a cock.

Chevykevv

1,447 posts

233 months

Tuesday 21st May 2013
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Craikeybaby

11,928 posts

251 months

Tuesday 21st May 2013
quotequote all
I don't mind them, as long as they're the correct font/spacing etc and aren't trying too hard.

I got my plate (letter numbers initials) for my 21st, it seems to be a popular present. I imagine it is something I will always have, even though it add a bit if extra work at car swapping time and restricts me to cars built in '91 or later. The plus side is the shorter number plate looks better, especially as on each car I buy I get new plates made up and I always know my registration number when asked.

goldblum

10,272 posts

193 months

Tuesday 21st May 2013
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The Zonda's plate is OK.

BlimeyCharlie

984 posts

168 months

Tuesday 21st May 2013
quotequote all
Very naff in my book.

"LOOK AT ME EVERYONE!"

Why are the vast majority of private plates on the most boring cars? Like someone has decided to be different and a bit 'wacky', but forgotten to apply that logic when buying the car they are driving.

I also think there is a strong link to it being perceived as being 'posh', like we live in 1970 still.
"He must be doing well, got a private plate".
Deluded.






anything fast

983 posts

190 months

Tuesday 21st May 2013
quotequote all
F47 BOY 2006 DODGE PICK UP
F4TTY 2007 FERRARI F430
F4TTS 2006 VW TOUAREG
F4TSO 1995 RELIANT ROBIN (YOU WHAT?)

some genuine 'fat' number plates

Grandfondo

12,241 posts

232 months

Tuesday 21st May 2013
quotequote all
BlimeyCharlie said:
Very naff in my book.

"LOOK AT ME EVERYONE!"

Why are the vast majority of private plates on the most boring cars? Like someone has decided to be different and a bit 'wacky', but forgotten to apply that logic when buying the car they are driving.

I also think there is a strong link to it being perceived as being 'posh', like we live in 1970 still.
"He must be doing well, got a private plate".
Deluded.
rolleyes your post says lots about you!

toppstuff

13,698 posts

273 months

Tuesday 21st May 2013
quotequote all
Grandfondo said:
BlimeyCharlie said:
Very naff in my book.

"LOOK AT ME EVERYONE!"

Why are the vast majority of private plates on the most boring cars? Like someone has decided to be different and a bit 'wacky', but forgotten to apply that logic when buying the car they are driving.

I also think there is a strong link to it being perceived as being 'posh', like we live in 1970 still.
"He must be doing well, got a private plate".
Deluded.
rolleyes your post says lots about you!
Indeed.

This thread is fascinating.

Quite a few people seem to carry some baggage around their perception of what they may call "snobbery". Chris Harris calls it "self absorption" but it amounts to the same thing ; a sense of judging people by appearances and the superficial, but in reverse, as if the holders of private plates are somehow acting as if they are trying to be above them. Thats how the haters seem to see it. And they instinctively don't like it.

I would be the first to admit that many private plates do nothing for me. I laugh as much as the next man when I see a cheesy or naff plate. But some of the posts here show more than this. Some of them are full of obviously hate filled bile that even the posters themselves don't seem to be aware of.

People shouldn't really care as much as they do about this issue.

This thread really shouldn't be this long.

But it is. People are certainly complicated....





sleep envy

62,260 posts

275 months

Tuesday 21st May 2013
quotequote all
toppstuff said:
People are certainly complicated.
I'm thinking the exact opposite.