pulling, speed pressure and Q plates.......
pulling, speed pressure and Q plates.......
Author
Discussion

da_murphster

Original Poster:

1,052 posts

269 months

Wednesday 14th April 2004
quotequote all
I'm normally on the VX220 forum but I would like to ask peoples help/ask their opinion on my drive home yesterday....

Driving back from N.Wales to B'ham, about 6 miles from home (after and excellent A5 drive) and a car starts driving VERY close behind me, the headlights were so bright that when I looked in the mirror I had white spots in front of my eyes and nearly crashed (thought bus lane stop was my turn off). I flicked the rear mirror nob (never had to do before), turned onto a country road for final blast home - car follows me.

He was driving very oddly, I was worried, thought police, but thought no police car would tail so close with headlights like that, so though - highjack/finding where I live/boy racer.

Decided they werent going to ruin my drive so blasted home (fast round country lanes-never over 59mph though), car staying with me, always VERY close (once he'd caught up - of course ).

Now I'm worried, so worried that I don't go home and drive past my house, enter 30 zone and make sure I'm doing 29 before I get to it.

After more tailgating the blue lights go (was expecting/almost pleased with this). G/f of course bursts into tears.

Turns out the plates I had made at the mph show are non-flash (I knew this but didnt believe they would work). Not only are they anti flash but their night vision couldn't pick them up.

They were not happy, threatened me with speeding ticket (I KNEW I hadnt sped) peeled off my front 3/4 plate (I'm sure they are not allowed to do that).

Now I have to replace my plates, no 3/4 size, no nice 220VX spacing (of corse no anti flash!) and get they verified by MOT place.

If I "re-offend" they said that the DVLA would revoke my liciencing and make the car have Q plates!!! I'm going to research this - sounds dodgy to me.

They never mentioned the speeding again so I'm assuming that this will not be followed up (no ticket given at time)

Lessons learnt:
Non-flash plates work.
They are also non-night vision, thus v. obvious to plod
Beware of some plod - I'm certain they were trying to pressure me to speed


DVLA can make your car a Q plate (Allegedly)

I did complain about there driving at the time but everything they/you say is recorded so they just acted like robots, no "chat" at all.

I'm gunna miss my 220VX spacing and 3/4 plate!!!

Anyone know anything ref this Q plate thing? I was going to wait a while then ring DVLA to see what they know about me, poss consider going back to my spacings.

Sleepless night with all this going round in my head (did I do anything wrong?Should I have pulled over and at the start?Should I have noted all there details for complaint?)

Mainly pleased not to get a ticket, so didnt say anthing more to them. Getting pulled is horrible, I deal with pressured situation all the time (Queen and country etc etc) but I was shaking with adrenalin.


>>> Edited by da_murphster on Wednesday 14th April 13:44

>>> Edited by da_murphster on Wednesday 14th April 13:44

cptsideways

13,813 posts

274 months

Wednesday 14th April 2004
quotequote all
The ANPR in car unit uses IR illuminators I think. So yes non refelctive is non reflective to IR too.



You did the right thing, but maybe head for the nearest nick if there is one open.

fish

4,056 posts

304 months

Wednesday 14th April 2004
quotequote all
You don't have to have a full length plate if you have few characters, as long as they are spaced correctly and their is the right gap round from memory its 11mm top and bottom and 11mm between characters and 22mm between the groups and at each end that is fine.

If you get them done at say Halfords just ask them to put all the letters to the right so that when you cut it down you don't cut off the bit with the BS number on as that is also required.

Hope that helps.

Plotloss

67,280 posts

292 months

Wednesday 14th April 2004
quotequote all
If you plate is a cherished one in some way then they have the right to revoke those plates which is where I think the Q plate confusion comes from.

What I think will happen though rather than getting Q plates (car of questionable origin) you just go back the reg on your car or get one of that age.

da_murphster

Original Poster:

1,052 posts

269 months

Wednesday 14th April 2004
quotequote all
Cheers for the help peoples!!

Yep cherished plate, its..... (letter)222OVX, so would really like to stick a space between the first and remaining 2's - I'm assuming any "legit" plates people will not be able to do this.

The Police bloke mentioned the cherished bit and the DVLA. Returning to original plate sounds less scary than Q plate, but he did specifically mention this.

If I wait a bit and contact the DVLA will they tell me if I have "black mark" against me, I think there is a good chance that he will not see reporting me as a "constructive use of his time" (far too many people to pressure into driving at 61mph on empty county roads for that). How many strikes do you have with the DVLA?

He did not give me any points/fine for this, could he have? what could I have been looking at?

Plotloss

67,280 posts

292 months

Wednesday 14th April 2004
quotequote all
No points no fine is no crime surely?

Carry on as normal with the newly adjusted plates...

stiffee

26 posts

272 months

Wednesday 14th April 2004
quotequote all
you should of done an emergency stop (due to an animal fox/badger/owl?) crossing the country lanes seen if they were too close or not

da_murphster

Original Poster:

1,052 posts

269 months

Wednesday 14th April 2004
quotequote all
Ref: "carry on as normal"

I've gotta get some new plates inspected by MOT station and post certificate to Plod within 2 weeks.

Peter Ward

2,097 posts

278 months

Wednesday 14th April 2004
quotequote all
I was once followed closely by a police car for several miles with blues flashing. On a pitch-dark tree-lined A-road with just blue flashes all around it's quite frightening and disorientating.

When he did finally stop me with flashed headlights he criticised me for driving too close to the car in front. To be honest I think he was closer to me than I was to the car in front, but I was so disorientated by the blue flashing plus the adrenaline of it all that I couldn't say much.

I do sympathise with your situation. I don't think some police really understand the pressure they put law-abiding people under because they're used to dealing with hardened criminals.

mojocvh

16,837 posts

284 months

Thursday 15th April 2004
quotequote all
do sympathise with your situation. I don't think some police really understand the pressure they put law-abiding people under because they're used to dealing with hardened criminals.


Don't you believe it

wiggy001

6,983 posts

293 months

Thursday 15th April 2004
quotequote all
Peter Ward said:
I don't think some police really understand the pressure they put law-abiding people under because they're used to dealing with hardened criminals.


xxplod

2,269 posts

266 months

Thursday 15th April 2004
quotequote all
Frankly, if you're such a numpty as to mis-space your number plate you deserve little sympathy. Also, the Police COULD seize an illegal plate. It is rare, but I've seen it done. Driver started down the line, "My mates a barrister, I'm going to sue you, it isn't illegal, haven't you anything better to do...blah...." The old school trafpol replied, "Well, if you mates a barrister and you're going to sue me, then it is clearly in the interests of justice to preserve best evidence." And promptly unscrewed the number plates.

If you do have a Police car driving right up your backside, I'd consider slamming on the brakes, depending on the circs. If it was clearly on a response and looking for an overtake then no. But if it was trying to pull me for speeding? Extreme, but it could help your case. One thing is for sure, the Police driver would almost certainly be prosecuted for Careless Driving. And rightly so. Police drivers are trained to do it how it should be done, and driving inches from the car in front is not it.

Flat in Fifth

47,751 posts

273 months

Thursday 15th April 2004
quotequote all
xxplod said:


8< 8< snip snip

The old school trafpol replied, "Well, if you mates a barrister and you're going to sue me, then it is clearly in the interests of justice to preserve best evidence." And promptly unscrewed the number plates.

8< 8< snip snip


another classic coffee meets monitor moment

thanks!

da_murphster

Original Poster:

1,052 posts

269 months

Thursday 15th April 2004
quotequote all
[/quote]If you do have a Police car driving right up your backside, I'd consider slamming on the brakes, depending on the circs. [/quote]

Thats intresting from a BiB, I understand that if I had done this and he has run into me (unlikley as I'm not that necky and such hassle getting car fixed) then he would have been at fault, prob prosecuted.

But if slammed on, leads to near miss then that would have lead to one unhappy copper, my £1000 fine for plates and points for possibly doing 61mph at some stage etc etc.

If I had been on a bike and slammed on brakes, then the cop car would definately have hit me, is that not me driving dangerously if I unnecessarily brake??

hertsbiker

6,443 posts

293 months

Thursday 15th April 2004
quotequote all
Is it ok for a cop to steal your plates then?
Huh. Not liking this at all. If someone tailgates me in a car-jack-stylee, I can tell you that they may not be driving home without the help of a low-loader. Any threat to me will be dealt with accordingly.

xxplod

2,269 posts

266 months

Thursday 15th April 2004
quotequote all
The word is "seize" not steal! Yes, of course the Police can seize evidence relevant to an offence!

chim450

1,452 posts

283 months

Friday 16th April 2004
quotequote all
xxplod said:
The word is "seize" not steal! Yes, of course the Police can seize evidence relevant to an offence!


Great, I will sleep better tonight in the knowledge that our police forces are out there protecting us. God bless.