I first became aware of the dreaded mod plates when I was into American cars. It's been a pain in the rear in Qld for years though it does have a (vaguely) sensible basis. Prior to the blue plates you just got a paper certificate showing approval of the modification - but if the paperwork got lost, there was no proof it had ever been approved so any work had to be recertified according to the current standards which could mean even more work. At least the blue plates show what was approved, stay with the car and you can't be forced to re-engineer to updated standards. But... the plates are ugly as sin, if you do one piece of work this year and another next you'll get 2 plates (I've seen one T4 with 3 separate plates - LPG and two seat updates - riveted here, there and everywhere) and they don't just speak but yell of a certification regime that needs standardising across the states. But why do that when you can hit up people again and again for no good reason (unless the state being broke is reason enough)?
-----------------------------
1998 T4 LWB 2.4D
2007 Ford Escape
Google Climategate
Bookmarks