Scottish Driver?

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santaman2000

M.A.B (Mad About Bushcraft)
Jan 15, 2011
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Florida
If it weren't for the title and the right hand drive, I'd have sworn this was a blonde California Valley Girl: video.
 
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:rofl: :lmao: :rolleyes:

Those hoses stretch far enough to go right to the other side of the car :D

What makes you ask if the driver was Scottish ?

M

I wasn't really asking; I was stating with a bit of incredibility (the ? in the thread title was meant more as a sign of disbelief than a true question) If you could see the whole video site's title you'd see it's from a Scottish website. If it weren't for that in the title and the obvious UK right hand drive I would have thought she was Californian.

Am I the only one who misses the old days when the gas cap was in the middle of the back (under the rear tag)
 
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Car registration starts FP which makes it Nottingham area, not Scotland

When I was stationed there, the tag (number plate) stayed with the car for it's entire lifespan, or at least the numbers did. Meaning that no matter how many times the cart was sold and/or changed locations, the number would always be the same. Is this no longer true?
 
When I was stationed there, the tag (number plate) stayed with the car for it's entire lifespan, or at least the numbers did. Meaning that no matter how many times the cart was sold and/or changed locations, the number would always be the same. Is this no longer true?

It is still true. Unless you buy a 'private' registration plate for your car, with some assortment of letters that mean something to you and not other motorists. It's not like the US/CAN in that you can spell out your own plate within reason.
 
It is still true. Unless you buy a 'private' registration plate for your car, with some assortment of letters that mean something to you and not other motorists. It's not like the US/CAN in that you can spell out your own plate within reason.

You can do that here as well; they're called vanity plates, but they're not "private." They're still issued from the state or province. Not sure about Mexican plates.

The reason I asked was because of the obvious: it really doesn't matter where the car current owner lives now, the number will always reflect where the original owner registered it. That is if said numbers indicate place. Back in the day (back when I was there) the first letter denoted the year of registration.
 
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