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I have just MOT'd my 110.It is infact a Class 5 not 7. This means the axles are rated at 3050kg, and not the usual 3000kg. The only real difference is it is about £3 more expensive.I asked why it is what it is, and the MOT man said, they are just like it. Heavier payload. Hope this helps. :)By the way, mine went straight through. 1984 110. :D
It might be a class 7 if it has more than 7 seats??? Mines a T/C so it only has 2. This seems more likely. :)
discodod on here thats just signed up is also my local MOT tester
So I rang VOSA (the people who oversee MoTs) to clarify the situation. This is what they told me:If a vehicle has a GLW under 3500kg, an unladen weight under 2040kg, has four wheel drive and is equipped to carry one or more passengers (including the front seats) then it is a 'dual purpose' vehicle for MoT purposes and should be tested as class 4. As far as I can tell, the only commercial Land Rovers which do not meet these criteria are the big 127/130 vehicles, and possibly the Series 2 forward controls. I have since had this confirmed in writing. VOSA sent me an extract from the 6th edition MOT Testing Guide, as follows:Dual purpose vehicles 3. A `Dual purpose vehicle' is one that is constructed or adapted for the carriage of both passenger(s) and goods or burden of any description; and has an unladen weight (ULW) not exceeding 2,040 kg; and which either:(a) is so constructed or adapted so that the driving power of the engine, is, or by the use of the appropriate controls can be, transmitted to all the wheels of the vehicle; or(b) satisfies the following conditions .......