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Post By Tomkat
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9 May 2021
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Officials, that are that way out will find an excuse. Why hand them one? I have a Yorkshire Rose sticker on my bike windscreen, I like the design, it introduces me, it adds white to a dark outline that Honda allowed a 13 year old wannabe cartoonist to "style". If required I'd add anything official be it a sticker with an silhouette of Boris, old style tax disk or whatever. If the Lancashire plod were that bad I might even remove the White Rose, but more likely I'd just stay out of Lancashire.
Andy
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9 May 2021
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I used to have a "Europlate", and it was in a way an affirmation of European identity. Likewise I have seen people who obviously covered that up to show the Union flag, despite that not being an official number plate design.
My plate got melted unfortunately, so now I have a boring standard BSAU145d plate, though I do have a GB sticker on my top box on blue with a ring of stars
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10 May 2021
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Tomkat
I do have a GB sticker on my top box on blue with a ring of stars 
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I have one of those on a classic car that I take 'abroad' from time to time although the sticker dates from long before the referendum. On my ancient Suzuki I've been using a sticker on the numberplate for some time as well and now it seems I'll have to cover the EU part up - or cut it off - to make it slightly less illegal  I presume it's illegal everywhere now - both in the UK as well as the EU. Ah, well, the road to hell is paved with good intentions.
I'll probably stick something onto the top box before I (eventually) head off again on it but if you were to take the rear of the bike in at a glance you'd probably think I came from some place with an obscure identifier -
A friend in the US has the same sticker on the back of his Triumph and he's been asked several times what country that's from. We're far more 'cosmopolitan' over here so I've not had that.
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10 May 2021
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I had the same question when I had an ADV sticker on the bike.
__________________
"For sheer delight there is nothing like altitude; it gives one the thrill of adventure
and enlarges the world in which you live," Irving Mather (1892-1966)
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10 May 2021
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Quote:
Originally Posted by backofbeyond
Ah, well, the road to hell is paved with good intentions.
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Paved with rotting fish, I think
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11 May 2021
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If they were really officious they would tell you that the letters on the GB sticker should be the same size as on your index plate ffs
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12 May 2021
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Quote:
Originally Posted by chris gale
If they were really officious they would tell you that the letters on the GB sticker should be the same size as on your index plate ffs
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Is that true? I know it is (was anyway) true for cars but I thought bike ones were allowed to be smaller. Certainly the 70's (pre joining 'Europe') trip pictures I have left show me using smaller GB plates and the bike ones they still sell on X channel ferry shops are smaller than the car ones. Either way I can't say it gives me any sleepless nights.
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12 May 2021
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If you go outside the eu you need the big old oval one . The regs are so boring I'm glad I never joined the traffic dept . As said other things to worry about tbh......like will brittany ferries sail to Porto
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11 May 2021
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[QUOTE=backofbeyond;620074]I have one of those on a classic car that I take 'abroad' from time to time although the sticker dates from long before the referendum. On my ancient Suzuki I've been using a sticker on the numberplate for some time as well and now it seems I'll have to cover the EU part up - or cut it off - to make it slightly less illegal  I presume it's illegal everywhere now - both in the UK as well as the EU. Ah, well, the road to hell is paved with good intentions.
I don't fancy taking my bike over to Northern Ireland and driving down the Falls Road with a Union flag identifier, ok in some parts of town but not others..
I used the same just put a sticker on the numberplate.
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