I am not going to say whether you should or should not have your classic Mot’d but as a MOT tester it is interesting reading this thread.
You do all know the mot manual hand guide is available on-line on .gov webpages?
Testing guide : Not really any concern to the car owner , it is for testers, site managers and garage owners.
https://www.gov.uk/guidance/mot-testing-guide
Mot manual. This is of use as it is what the testers go by but don’t get too carried away , read carefully as there are many dates for items and as such not applicable in some circumstances.
https://www.gov.uk/guidance/mot-inspect ... l-vehicles
Emissions for those who may be interested is under section 8 Nuisance .
You only need to test vehicles registered from 1/8/1975 so that is P reg onwards.
There was a comment the emissions test has got stricter. Emissions test limits are carried out in categories depending on the vehicle year so there is no concern that a 1990 Mini is expected to pass a emissions test to the same limits as a 3 year old Golf.
There are flow charts in section 8 that help to identify what emissions test to carry out.
In all honesty if your competent enough to rebuild your car there is no reason why you and a helper could not do the basic safety check that is the Mot . I realise you may want to get a professional look at it for piece of mind. If it were mot’d it is only really valid to be fault free at time of test . You could drive into a pot hole pulling onto the main road when leaving the test station resulting in a bulge on a tyres inner sidewall (mot failure) but it still has 12 months MOT .
Get helper to wiggle steering , put foot on the brake , operate handbrake , wiggle the wheels checking for play whilst you are there with a light checking what is happening as the helper does there stuff.
Check all lights work properly and there is no interaction with other lamps ….sure some of you remember the mk3 escorts that turned the rear lamps into a flashing disco light because of earthing and corrosion issues. , horn and wipers must work. Check there is no excessive play or corrosion in steering , suspension or brake components , make sure there is no excessive corrosion within 12 inches of seatbelt , suspension , steering or brakes mounts including subframe mounts in our case. No twisted chaffed or split brake hoses or excessively corroded hose ferrules or brake pipes. Brake disc back plates are not a mot item unless they are going to adversely affect steering suspension or brake components. I put that in as the disc back plates on my wife’s 1996 Spi have corroded at there mounts and had broken away . She thought they were needed for MOT , they aren’t but she wanted them replaced . Check Tyres and the rest etc etc as per the manual.
Incidentally unlike some vehicle test categories that have a 10 year age limit on tyres the class 4 (car ) mot does not have a date limit.
I am sure you guys and gals on here if you find something is loose broken or in need of adjustment you will rectify it. What the barn find brigade on eBay do with classics could be entirely different .
Incidentally since when is a old concrete lock up garage a barn?
How do the ads go…..Barn find , mk1 , Cooper S , works , GT , nos, retro , deco , mid century….lol .
I have a house in central France . They have proper barns and barn finds over there.
Hope that helps.
D