willcove wrote:
There are several problems with these ideas.
Let’s go through the exceptions and see if we can boil it down a bit.
willcove wrote:
No MOT=No Fuel - It is perfectly legal to drive a car that has no current MOT provided that journey is to a test station or repairer.
A car only has an MOT once per year. The technical solution is to allow some refills without an MOT up to an agreed limit, of say three times. After this, it is suspicious and needs investigating by the nearest patrol car. NO FUEL!
willcove wrote:
It is perfectly legal to refuel a car that has no current MOT even if it is not on such a journey - provided the car is being trailered.
The cops couldn’t care less about cars on trailers, so neither should the system flag them. Unless you want it too? But why would you want that? Perhaps a chav could have a spare car to tow his un-taxed one to the gas station to get fuel! To get petrol, you either have to a) have all the legal stuff right or b) declare that you are not using the car on the road. ANPR will fish out anybody who offends after this.
willcove wrote:
It is perfectly legal to fill fuel cans, for which there would be no information to check.
I’ve got no problem with that. I use petrol mower myself. Of course, chav’s may fill cans with fuel from cans for another purpose, so it just makes life that little bit more humiliating and difficult for them, which is a fine thing on it’s own! That’s the point, isn’t it?
willcove wrote:
No Insurance=No Fuel - It is the driver who needs to be insured, not the car.
With the new system, it is the driver who needs to be able to
show he is insured for that car to get fuel. If he can’t show that, NO FUEL.
willcove wrote:
Unless the car is driven on the road, it needs no insurance. (e.g. trailered cars)
The cops couldn’t care less about cars on trailers, so neither should the system flag them. Unless you want it too? But why would you want that? To get petrol, you either have to a) have all the legal stuff right or b) declare that you are not using the car on the road. ANPR will fish out anybody who offends after this.
willcove wrote:
The driver may not be the person who pays for the fuel
The cops couldn’t care less about who pays for the fuel, so neither should the system flag them. The only thing the system, needs is proof that the driver is insured to drive that car.