Exactly but i thought you said it was cheaper... Old age again eh.DaiRees wrote:£121 for 6 months would work out as £220 per year, they add on 10% for those who can't afford the full year.

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Exactly but i thought you said it was cheaper... Old age again eh.DaiRees wrote:£121 for 6 months would work out as £220 per year, they add on 10% for those who can't afford the full year.
Yours was £225 and John's would have been £220, so it is cheaper. Being post March 2001 it's taxed on emissions rather than engine size, and producing less than 185 g/km it was a band cheaper than the standard 2l petrol, which I think would be £260 this year. Car's registered before March 2001 are taxed on engine size, over 1549cc is £225. Buying the class leading, lowest emission, petrol engined, large family car back in 2002 meant significant savings over similar cars produced a year earlier. However the government, bless their cotton socks, are hammering the higher emissions banded cars more than the pre-emissions banded cars, so when your was £200 a few years back, I bet mine was about £170. Next year I predict the rates for both will be £230scotty73 wrote:Exactly but i thought you said it was cheaper... Old age again eh.DaiRees wrote:£121 for 6 months would work out as £220 per year, they add on 10% for those who can't afford the full year.
No, not frustrating at all mate, John's spent a couple of hundred quid on fixing it but by the time I'd paid for diagnostics and labour and parts and VAT it would probably have cost me £500 to fix it, plus a load of hassle. Then I'd have had to sell it immediately because it was already surplus to requirements, more hassle! I'm chuffed John's had a relatively straightforward fix and the car is back on the road, he's got a cracking motorWelly wrote:Sorry, I didn't realise that Jasper has revived Dai's motor, well done, probably slightly frustrating for Dai that this couldn't have been found when he was trying to fix it but then again when you reach a certain level of "pissed-off with it" then even another £20.00 is too much to bear. Its probably all worked out to be fair in the end though.
I changed one, I think it was early last year (check the receipts? Ring purchased off an internet supplier and changed by Kieth's Motor Repairs), hope it was the other one!jasper5 wrote:Oddly, I found a broken reluctor ring on the driver's side front, didn't show as an ABS fault nor on the mot! Another job to do.
DaiRees wrote:Sounds like a productive day![]()
I changed one, I think it was early last year (check the receipts? Ring purchased off an internet supplier and changed by Kieth's Motor Repairs), hope it was the other one!jasper5 wrote:Oddly, I found a broken reluctor ring on the driver's side front, didn't show as an ABS fault nor on the mot! Another job to do..
If the ring isn't spinning on the hub it won't show up as a fault, the slightly larger gap where it's split isn't enough to register as it's only passing the sensor once per revolution. The one that cracked previously used to spin (very rarely and only under heavy braking), causing the ABS to cut in when it wasn't really needed, but that never registered as a fault either because the system just thought that that wheel had lost grip and therefore that everything was working properly.
Watch out John, the Mondeo Detective is after you!!Bailes1992 wrote:2.0TDCi? They didn't fit the lynx to the MK3 only the Puma diesel.
I thought the MK3 was a good design? They just unbolt?
DaiRees wrote:Watch out John, the Mondeo Detective is after you!!Bailes1992 wrote:2.0TDCi? They didn't fit the lynx to the MK3 only the Puma diesel.
I thought the MK3 was a good design? They just unbolt?
Careful John the Welsh defectors are arguing over you....Bailes1992 wrote:DaiRees wrote:Watch out John, the Mondeo Detective is after you!!Bailes1992 wrote:2.0TDCi? They didn't fit the lynx to the MK3 only the Puma diesel.
I thought the MK3 was a good design? They just unbolt?
Be carefull John, the posh Old mans Mondeo detective is being a sarcastic bastard