KC wrote:
I think you will find that B+E is limited to 4.25 tons, as that is what the driving licence allows 3.5 tons of vehicle plus 750kg of trailer. anything beyond that comes under catagory D1.
No - with B+E, you can drive any car/trailer combination that meets all of the following requirements:
- Gross weight of car (AFAICT, excluding the drawbar load - or noseweight) does not exceed the lesser of the MAM of the car or 3.5 tonnes.
- Front and rear axle weights of the car (AFAICT, taking account of noseweight) do not exceed the limits stipulated by the car manufacturer.
- The gross weight of the trailer does not exceed the MTPLM for that trailer.
- The gross train weight does not exceed the maximum gross train weight for the car.
(BTW, D1 is for "minibuses"; the "catch-all" category for non-buses is C+E).
The 4.25 tonne limitation is an error that, for me, first came to light when a friend wanted to buy an Ifor Williams double horsebox to tow behind a Discovery. The gross train weight would have exceeded 4.25 tonnes (and the maximum permissible weight of the combination was over 5 tonnes). At the time, the DVLA's D100 leaflet said for B+E:
Quote:
Combinations of vehicles consisting of a vehicle in category B and a trailer over 750kg, where the combination does not come within Category B and the MAM of the combination does not exceed 4.25 tonnes.
So, Ifor Williams lost the sale of the double horsebox and, on behalf of my friend who doesn't have Internet access, I wrote to them pointing out this limitation and asking why they said on their website that horsebox and Disco was legal under B+E when the DVLA info implied that you'd need a full C+E ("HGV1"). After some weeks, Ifor Williams replied that my message had caused much consternation. However, after investigating they were sure that the DVLA leaflet was incorrect and that the 4.25 tonne restriction was an error.
I phoned DVLA and, after I was passed from pillar to post a few times, someone at DVLA confirmed the error. However, because of the cost of reprinting, they had no intention of replacing those leaflets with ones that told the truth. (FFS! that leaflet is the only thing that many people use to identify the privileges of their licence).
With all that said, I looked on the DVLA website yesterday and found that they have at least replaced the downloadable PDF, which now states:
Quote:
Combinations of vehicles consisting of a vehicle in category B and a trailer over 750kg
(BTW, nowhere on either the old or new D100 leaflet do they state whether the 750 kg trailer is actual gross weight or MTPLM)
FWIW, I've just noticed an interesting spin-off here. To take a test for B+E, one driving school claimed that you had to turn up with a car/trailer combination that wasn't covered by category B. For example, where the MAM of the combination exceeded 3.5 tonnes (and that was the reason they taught using a heavy car and fairly large box trailer). But this new definition merely says that the trailer must have MTPLM over 750 kg. So, you could have a vehicle that was both in category B and in B+E! (e.g. a car with MAM of 1.5 tonnes towing a trailer with MTPLM of 1 tonne). But ... I wonder whether DVLA have made yet another error and just hope that some unfortunate wretch doesn't turn up for a B+E test with a car/trailer combination that would be legal under category B only to be told that his vehicle is unsuitable for the test ;(