Iva on imported daytona?

Iva on imported daytona?

Author
Discussion

geeeman

Original Poster:

1,310 posts

256 months

Saturday 31st December 2016
quotequote all
http://m.carandclassic.co.uk/car/C791855

How come this didnt need iva for registering in uk?

GinG15

501 posts

172 months

Sunday 1st January 2017
quotequote all
how you knopw it has not been IVA-ed?

geeeman

Original Poster:

1,310 posts

256 months

Monday 2nd January 2017
quotequote all
Owned told me it didnt need one to gain registration here....


Trabi601

4,865 posts

96 months

Monday 2nd January 2017
quotequote all
From the plate, I'm guessing registered in 2016, but declared as first used in 1965 with appropriate foreign documents to support.

GinG15

501 posts

172 months

Tuesday 3rd January 2017
quotequote all
the 65 US title is fake.....there isnt anything on that car from 65

Chris-S

282 posts

89 months

Wednesday 4th January 2017
quotequote all
So 'evocation' is the new word for replica then? At face value, it looks no more correctly described & registered than the plethora of 'rebodied' Duttons doing the rounds.

Be nice if that was wrong, but can't help thinking it is a poor attempt at dodging the IVA.

If it IS a genuine Daytona, someone is getting a bargain at £60k...... (no, I don't really think so either)

Looks nice though.

ETA....even if it was genuine, wouldn't it still require an IVA?? I'm sure I saw a horror story about someone doing a personal import of a Maser and having to SVA it. It failed badly apparently on a whole load of internal projection issues.

Edited by Chris-S on Wednesday 4th January 21:30

Trabi601

4,865 posts

96 months

Wednesday 4th January 2017
quotequote all
It has tax and MOT, so I assume now it has lost the USA paperwork, it will always be 'legit'.

PAUL500

2,637 posts

247 months

Friday 6th January 2017
quotequote all
If any imported car is older than 10 years then IVA not required, regardless of what it is. A quirk of the system.

Take two identical cars, one constructed in the UK from an old donor but not correctly re registered, then IVA required. Its sister car built the same way in Azerbazerkardashinastan and then imported into the UK, all that one has to do is pass an MOT and its road legal here for ever more.

GinG15

501 posts

172 months

Saturday 7th January 2017
quotequote all
a "clever" kitcar manufactuer would clearly profit from that loophole in the uk-reg. laws!!


AlmostUseful

3,283 posts

201 months

Sunday 8th January 2017
quotequote all
Ignoring the legalities or moralities of such a car, that thing is bloody beautiful!

ugg10

681 posts

218 months

Sunday 8th January 2017
quotequote all
GinG15 said:
a "clever" kitcar manufactuer would clearly profit from that loophole in the uk-reg. laws!!
Only if you are willing to sink a load of money for not building cars with no buyers and then sit on them for 10 years until you can import and sell them. Also you need to find a country that is easier and cheaper to register a car than the uk, most europenpan countries this is more difficult.

But agree, car is georgeous, just had a look at the Kirkham all alluminium 289 coupe, need to win the lottery!



Edited by ugg10 on Sunday 8th January 10:53

GinG15

501 posts

172 months

Monday 9th January 2017
quotequote all
US and SA will be the countries of your choice.

like it has been done with the above mentioned daytona.

the US title with the old reg-date is from "something"

means, you can built a new kitcar with an old reg-date. no need to wait 10 years.