quote="Rewolf"]There is an article in todays Auto Express where they give the results of a 3 month experiment where they purchased a cheap Renault 5 in France and registered it correctly to a French address, and then brought it into the UK and tried to get fined.
No matter what they did, nobody appeared to make any attempt at tracking them down, even though they had done everything possible to make sure that they were trackable...[/size]
I can confirm this, with the following story.
A German guy I know who was about to be based in the UK for two years actually bought a new right-hand drive BMW 330D from the local dealer in Germany specifically to use in the UK, planning to eventually sell it here to a UK buyer prior to his return to Germany. He registered it at his German company address, and drove it here on German plates for over two years. He could do this because the German company address was valid and real, and the company was trading.
Just prior to advertising and selling it, he 'imported' it and registered it with DVLA Swansea. Interestingly, though the car had never been registered in UK, it was allocated UK plates with the prefix letter appropriate to its original date of German registration. I bought the car off him in 2002.
He claimed to have been flashed by Gatso cameras a minimum of 20x (TWENTY TIMES) EVERY WEEK in the UK, sometimes travelling at 30 or 40mph over the posted limit, and his German company had NEVER RECEIVED ONE SINGLE LETTER OR COMMUNICATION OF ANY KIND. He once claimed to have set off 15 cameras in one day.
Eire registration, and an Irish driving licence, is an easy and obvious response to the lying, greedy scamera mafias now infesting the UK like a dangerous virus. The thought of setting off 15 or 20 gatsos every day and smiling in the full kowledge that one is completely immune from prosecution fills one with a nice, warm glow. This is the way to go, fellas.

And it's 100% legal.