All boils down to whether you are stupid enough to bend over and receive punishment, or whether your brave enough to push it to court.
Was told several years ago at a DVSA "seminar" that IF I was stopped at the roadside and didn't agree with the opinions of the DVSA man it is essential to PUSH it to court.
Most will come under this EXEMPTION.
"
Vehicles or combinations of vehicles with a maximum permissible mass not exceeding 7.5 tonnes that are used for carrying materials, equipment or machinery for the driver’s use in the course of their work and which are used only within a 100 km radius from the base of the undertaking and on the condition that driving the vehicle does not constitute the driver’s main activity.
This would apply to tradesmen such as electricians or builders carrying tools or materials for their own use."
Some of us will also come under this
"
Vehicles used in connection with sewerage, flood protection, water, gas and electricity maintenance services, road maintenance or control, door-to-door household refuse collection or disposal, telegraph or telephone services, radio or television broadcasting and the detection of radio or television transmitters or receivers.
There have been a number of significant court rulings from the European Court of Justice and British courts dealing with this exemption. Common themes have included a direct and close involvement in the exempt activity; the principle of a general service in the public interest; and the limited and secondary nature of the transport activity.
It’s DVSA’s view that vehicles used in connection with sewerage, flood protection, water, gas and electricity services must be involved in the maintenance of an existing service (rather than the construction of a new service) to claim the concession.
For vehicles used in connection with sewerage maintenance services the term “maintenance” also applies to the removal of waste from a system but only where the waste is removed directly onto the vehicle and immediately taken away for treatment. This would also include transporting partially treated sewage from satellite sites to main sites.
The derogation doesn’t apply to the movement of sewage sludge which has been treated to make a product which is then used for another purpose such as, for example, fertiliser.
The types of refuse collection and disposal operations likely to be exempt are:
- the door-to-door collection or from communal waste points of domestic waste such as black bin bags, green waste, garden waste, newspapers or glass from households
- the collection of sofas and household appliances from households within a local area
- the clearing of a home following a bereavement, provided refuse collection and disposal is the core purpose
The derogation will also apply to the collection of the domestic type waste from commercial premises but would not extend to collecting commercial waste, for example, waste generated by a manufacturing process.
Vehicles used in connection with road maintenance services which:
- are engaged on a journey directly relating to the maintenance services, for example, removing rubble or other materials or
- are being used directly on the maintenance activity, for example, laying tarmac
These will fall within this derogation however journeys to a site for the purpose of positioning the vehicle in readiness for engaging in the maintenance activity or for returning to base after the maintenance activity has ended will not fall within this derogation.
Vehicles which are to be used or have been used that same day in connection with highway maintenance and control and don’t travel far from the site where the work of highway maintenance is being carried out will fall within the derogation."
Personally I would have no qualms driving a pickup and trailer to Scotland and doing a Tour De Vosa on the return leg.... it is not a for profit journey and regardless of whether it is business use or not driving the pickup isn't earning money or my regular work..... take it to court and show that.
Regarding charging transport.... to my experience that is a Myth.... we charge transport on everything. The key issue is what the driver of the vehicle then does.
Example - I drive to site with digger on trailer within 100km radius, arrive and unload digger, go to merchants for pipe and materials then return to site to use the machine and the materials, at the end of the day I load digger on trailer and return home - I DO NOT NEED A TACHO as Driving the Pickup is incidental to the job I am doing (Laying pipe etc)
Example - Me and Bob drive to site with digger on trailer within 100km radius, arrive and unload digger, Bob gets to work whilst I go to merchants for pipe and materials then return to site to Help Bob, at the end of the day I load digger on trailer and return home (Bob is told to piss off and get the bus because he's upset me) - I NEED A TACHO as It could be perceived that helping Bob on site is incidental to my main task of driving the pickup and trailer on fetch and carry. In DVSA's eyes this would come under EU Rules.
Too many people bend over and take the bollocks.