Think ill add some info about the rules to my sticky at the top of the mk4 section.
Hopefully we can just point new members to that to save this argument all the time. While I love spacers and adapters, I do agree people should know what they are possibly getting themselves into
Yep, they're allowed if the manufacturer shipped them with the car from the factory.
The rule is designed to stop people from fitting them badly and causing problems - I've seen plenty of examples of non hub-centric spacers myself over the years, so the laws (although unfairly draconian) aren't totally without merit.
Nothing to see here...
If someone runs spacers, it's better for them that they know the risks, at least that way they're making an educated decision.
I'd rather be like that than encourage someone to do something that will end up with them in trouble or with someone injured or dead (which is worst case, but that's a pretty bad worst case - and I *have* seen terribly fitted spacers, as I noted in my previous post...).
Nothing to see here...
I'm sure Manaz meant the aftermarket spacers. Because, there is a difference between the spacers that came with the car/model from the factory and the spacers that you buy who knows where and fit them to your car.
And no, you can't buy the spacers from the dealer and fit them to the car that didn't come with the spacers from the factory. Just to make it easier to understand.
Performance Tunes from $850Wrecking RS OCTAVIA 2 Link
Ok, ....since you brought the question up.
The OP drives his car on the public roads, unles there are petrol stations at the race tracks.
I thought that you would know that, since you've visited that thread http://www.vwwatercooled.org.au/foru...tml#post828688
Last edited by Transporter; 17-09-2012 at 01:41 PM.
Performance Tunes from $850Wrecking RS OCTAVIA 2 Link
Sorry I don't take note of who makes what threads all the time! For argument's sake I may have assumed that he drives his perfectly legal and roadworthy car to the track, then changes to his +55 track wheels there.
I'm not hungry anymore.
I understand on public roads spacers/adapters are illegal and you can void your insurance if they find you have them. However realistically insurance companies will not pull you up on them unless the accident is related to a wheel falling off or something that will point them in that direction. We all know pretty much every car on the road can be found unroadworthy so if they want to screw you, they will.
BTW this thread is going nowhere and I ain't helping......................
I've seen some pretty in-depth investigations by insurance companies - including having a private accident investigator grill me several times over an incident I was involved in, until he realised that the car hadn't just been abandoned on the road as they thought, but I'd driven it into a shopping centre car park to get it out of the way. The insurer was looking at avoid paying out based on their misunderstanding that I'd abandoned the car in an undrivable state on the road and not called the police (you're obliged to call the police if a vehicle involved in an accident cannot be driven away from the scene).
Basically, if they can find a way to say that your actions were somehow negligent or illegal, they'll try to find a way to avoid paying out on the policy.
Nothing to see here...
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