While it is difficult to go against some type of examination when an unregistered vehicle is presented for registration, the fact is that regular inspections do not have any evidence to support the assumption that they add to road safety. For example, they are required annually for most cars in NSW and only when changing hands in Victoria, yet if anything, Victoria usually has better accident and casualty figures than NSW (probably becuse the roads are generally better due to fewer kilometres per taxpayer).
I suspect there are several reasons why inspections don't work:-
1. Very few accidents have vehicle defects as a major (or even minor) contributing cause (no accident has a single cause).
2. The most common accident contributing defect is tyres, either tread or pressure, and these defects can, and often do, develop in a matter of days or weeks, and many other defects can develop almost as quickly.
3. It is impossible for a vehicle to be adequately assessed for all faults at a cost that would be politically acceptable.
In my view regular checks are quite indefensible, and are simply part of the ever growing bureaucracy we live in. I got told by someone yesterday that according to a report they heard, NSW public servants, on average, use 9,000 sheets of paper a year. I can believe it.
John
John
JDNSW
1986 110 County 3.9 diesel
1970 2a 109 2.25 petrol
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