I'm all for paying less but I think the annual MOT is no bad thing personally.
I often lend a hand at a garage I used to work at when in chatting with the lads (sit in car, honking horns, shaking steering wheels, brakes on/off etc).
It's quite surprising what you see there
Recently a 02 plate Honda Civic was in for it's MOT. It was a 2.0 model with leather interior etc, obviously a higher spec one but I don't know a lot about Civics.
Anyhow, the car was owned by a little old lady on a housing estate and it had covered less than 14,500 miles since new (purely a shopping car), yet it failed its MOT because both anti-roll bar drop links had failed.
In the quest for recycle-able cars, the drop link ball joints are held together with melted plastic rivets.
It didn't matter much to granny but to a more spirited driver (Type R perhaps?) it could have been a real problem. Nothing against Hondas - I've always found them to be very reliable cars, but it still shows that nothing is indestructable and we need to keep a regular inspection routine up on cars.
Although an annual test wont solve much, one thing that did strike me was that the average member of the public books their car in for a service and MOT. They seem vaguely aware that cars need to be maintained but many aren't what I'd call religious about it. Given that many such problems (and even things like brake pads that were past it) we would find on cars came up during the service part. If only in for an MOT many more would have failed or been given advisories.
I just wonder if the average run-about would get that service (and brake pad change, for example) every year if the A5 sheet of paper wasn't needed each year???? Perhaps it wouldn't affect service patterns that much, although I'm certain that some wouldn't bother at all if it wasn't for the MOT part
