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NCT failure rate twice NI equivalent 16.09.11

by Caoimhinn Barr, Inishowen Independent

THE NCT test has come in for strong criticism from Donegal North East TD Charlie McConalogue after its annual report revealed that just under half (48%) of the vehicles tested in Co Donegal fail.
A total of 30,782 tests were conducted in Donegal in 2010, with 16,028 passes (52%), although both Letterkenny and Carn recorded below average pass rates.
Of the 3,378 tests conducted at the Carndonagh NCT centre just 1,650 passed (49%) with 10 cars recording a ‘dangerous fail’.
There were 15,620 tests at the Letterkenny NCT centre where 7,570 passed (49%) with 50 cars recording a dangerous fail.
In Derrybeg the pass rate is 49.6%, while at 61.3% Donegal Town has the highest pass rate of the 45 NCT centres in the country.
The overall pass rate for Donegal was 52%, the same as the national average.
By contrast, the equivalent MOT test in the North has a 22% failure rate. And that is despite the fact that the exact same equipment is used in conducting tests on both sides of the border.
“The same rationale underpins both the NCT and MOT – it’s to ensure cars are safe to use the roads and dangerous cars are taken off the roads – and I don’t see why the pass and fail rates should be so different between North and South,” Deputy McConalogue said.
“The high failure rate in the NCT in comparison to the MOT suggests that there are issues to be assessed by the authorities here.”
“I will write to the Minister to see if the discrepancies between the tests in the Republic and the North can be identified and to see if the NCT can be amended so that people have to make fewer trips to have their vehicles retested.
Burnfoot garage owner Denis Donaghey says there are more elements in the NCT than the MOT in the North.
Deputy McConalogue emphasised that the NCT is an important element in ensuring the safety of road users, but acknowledges that many people see the high failure rate and the subsequent requirement for retests as a money making exercise.
“The NCT is a good thing, and we must ensure that vehicles using our roads are roadworthy, but there’s a widely held feeling that many cars fail the NCT for relatively minor faults.”
The NCT costs €50 for a family vehicle, with retests costing an additional €28. The North’s MOT costs £30.50 (€35), with retests costing £18.50 (€21).
Donaghey’s garage in Burnfoot prepares cars ahead of the NCT and MOT tests and has installed the specialised equipment that both tests use.
Proprietor Denis Donaghey says that there are more elements to the NCT, and with more aspects being tested the chance of failing increases.
“For example, the emissions test is more stringent in the NCT,” Mr Donaghey says. “In the MOT, emissions are only tested when the car is ticking over and most vehicles will comfortably pass that, whereas the NCT requires the engine to be revved up and that is more likely cause an emissions fail.
And while a car will fail the NCT if its hubcaps have not been removed, that doesn’t apply in the North.
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