Odometer correction

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The_Ogre

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Is it legal?

A buddy of mine bought one of these machines from DX. Spent about 10k on the thing which got me thinking.

He's a qualified mechanic working for himself and he says it often happens that he puts in a different engine into a car and then needs to adjust the kilos to what he recons the new engine has on it.

What's the law around this? What's to stop me from going to him and telling him to take 100k's from my car so I can sell it for more than what its worth? ::love:

:p
 
Is it legal?

A buddy of mine bought one of these machines from DX. Spent about 10k on the thing which got me thinking.

He's a qualified mechanic working for himself and he says it often happens that he puts in a different engine into a car and then needs to adjust the kilos to what he recons the new engine has on it.

What's the law around this? What's to stop me from going to him and telling him to take 100k's from my car so I can sell it for more than what its worth? ::love:

:p
What he is doing is ethical. What you are suggesting he do to your car is down right illegal.
 
There is no law preventing you from doing a odometer rejuvenation however, if you sell the car after the rejuvenation you have to inform the buyer. If you don't it is considered fraud.
 
What he is doing is ethical. What you are suggesting he do to your car is down right illegal.
Its a hypothetical question, Dat! I would never take that chance, I'm just curious. That's all.

I actually never even know such devices existed.
 
Its a hypothetical question, Dat! I would never take that chance, I'm just curious. That's all.

I actually never even know such devices existed.

10k is a bit excessive, i've seen guys do it with a drill and some attachments bought from a hardware shop.
 
He's a qualified mechanic working for himself and he says it often happens that he puts in a different engine into a car and then needs to adjust the kilos to what he recons the new engine has on it.
Is that really how it works?
 
@Datura, it could be argued that what he is doing is NOT ethical. You forget that all the other parts of the car have experienced X amount of kilometres. Rolling back the kilometres you are implying that the entire car has only experienced the reduced amount of kilometres which is wrong. As most companies base value off year, model, and kilometres he would be causing the car to appreciate in value.

@YingYang please PM me his details so I can know who I shouldn't go to if I am looking not to be ripped off.
 
:erm:

Here I was always told it is illegal to change the KMs. That even if a new engine was installed, the KMs had to stay as they were....
 
@Datura, it could be argued that what he is doing is NOT ethical. You forget that all the other parts of the car have experienced X amount of kilometres. Rolling back the kilometres you are implying that the entire car has only experienced the reduced amount of kilometres which is wrong. As most companies base value off year, model, and kilometres he would be causing the car to appreciate in value.

@YingYang please PM me his details so I can know who I shouldn't go to if I am looking not to be ripped off.

Good point.
 
:erm:

Here I was always told it is illegal to change the KMs. That even if a new engine was installed, the KMs had to stay as they were....

It is not illegal to change the reading on the odometer. It is however illegal to sell the vehicle with a lesser clock reading and not inform the buyer about it.

Carte Blanche ran a story about this about 3-4 weeks ago.
 
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@Datura, it could be argued that what he is doing is NOT ethical. You forget that all the other parts of the car have experienced X amount of kilometres. Rolling back the kilometres you are implying that the entire car has only experienced the reduced amount of kilometres which is wrong. As most companies base value off year, model, and kilometres he would be causing the car to appreciate in value.

@YingYang please PM me his details so I can know who I shouldn't go to if I am looking not to be ripped off.

^this.
Also it is illegal, the car registration is supposed to have the mileage on in it and it needs to be updated every time the license is renewed. How would someone explain that their car suddenly has less mileage on it than when it was licensed the previous year?
 
It's illegal - no matter what spin you want to put on it.

I have heard that you can also do it with newer electronic speedos as well, so just be careful out there - if a mileage looks suspiciously low, when compared with the rest of the car, it possibly is!
 
I have heard that you can also do it with newer electronic speedos as well, so just be careful out there - if a mileage looks suspiciously low, when compared with the rest of the car, it possibly is!

To add on to what Fazda said here:

If you are buying a used vehicle, phone the manufacturer and ask for a log of work done. They usually indicate the kilometres on the service record.
 
Can't do that on newer cars with electronic odometers

Im willing to bet that it will be even easier to do it on a electronic odometer, just need the correct diagnostic tool.
 
Why does your friend think it is justified to change the odometer when putting in a new motor? The distance covered impacts many parts on a car, not just the motor.
 
Why does your friend think it is justified to change the odometer when putting in a new motor? The distance covered impacts many parts on a car, not just the motor.

A con artist will justify anything!! ;)
 
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