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Reassurance
on RV8 reimports following a BBC1 Watchdog programme in July
2001
We contacted Chris Watkins who runs the leading RV8
reimporters, HS Imports, following a BBC1 Watchdog programme
on the Great Car Fraud with Quentin Wilson concerning a substantial
flow of stolen 4x4s, stolen in Japan, which are turning up
in the UK. Most of these reimports are high value vehicles
like Toyota Land Cruisers, some involving some imaginative
reinventions of vehicle identity at a staging post in Dubai
on the way! Chris knows Japan very well and has considerable
experience with reimporting RV8s to the UK. In this note explains
how the system works in Japan and how the HS Imports team
take care with the cars they reimport from Japan. (Sep 01)
Some members watching the BBC1 Watchdog programme on stolen
4x4s turning up in the UK might have been concerned whether
a similar difficulty might involve MG RV8s, so we contacted
Chris Watkins to see how that risk might affect reimported
RV8s.

Chris Watkins, who runs HS Imports,
one of the leading RV8 reimporters in the UK.
Chris writes:
"I was away in Japan when the programme on the Great
Car Fraud with Quentin Wilson was transmitted so did not see
it but of course heard a few quips about it upon my return.
I had knowledge of some dubious characters selling Land Cruisers
"as new" when in fact they were not, but had no
idea of either the scale of the activity or that they might
have been stolen in Japan.
In case
anyone contacts you with concerns in relation to MG RV8s following
that TV programme, we can state with certainty that it
is impossible to formally buy a used car in Japan which has
been stolen. The registration system in Japan is so tight
that the only thing you could do with a stolen car would be
to ship it out of the country illegally. In normal circumstances
the vehicle registration changes with each change of owner
and the registration document must go with the car to the
buyer, even if the buyer is a dealer. The dealer then has
to register the car to himself. The car auctions, where most
Japanese exports come from, hold the registration papers and
service histories in their safes until the car is paid for.
So long as the car is purchased from the mainstream, it cannot
have been stolen. This is another good reason to see the auction
report on the car before buying it - apart from seeing the
condition and repair evidence that is. Every car purchased
in this way in Japan must be registered to the (Japanese)
buyer or dealer before it can be deregistered for export.
In the UK, all imported cars can only be registered if their
original Japanese deregistration document is handed in at
the vehicle registration office or VRO. They take five days
to register each car because (we are told) they submit details
to Interpol to check for stolen cars.
While on
the subject of accompanying paperwork, it might be as well
to add a little more on the value of the original documentation.
The Japanese auction houses complete a very thorough report
on each car sold. This report is available inside each car
at the auction, as are the keys so we can start up the car
and test electrics, clutch and other functions. The report
will tell us mileage (in Km), with a question mark boldly
inserted should there be reason to doubt the odometer. It
will also tell us whether there is a service history or not.
We cannot see the books before buying the car but at least
we know they exist.
HS Imports will only buy cars with a service history and we
translate it into English for the customer. By the way we
can also translate existing members' service books if they
would like us to - but we only translate the relevant information,
not the entire book! Most importantly the auction report gives
the grade of the car. So Zero, R or A will mean the
car has had an accident repair. It might still be a good car
of course, and the report shows each panel replaced and lists
repairs done. Grades 1, 2 and 3 are perhaps worse than these
as they will have damage (scratches and dents) which have
not been repaired. Grade 4 is a good, clean straight used
car, with grade 5 meaning "as new". Grade 4A or
4.5 is therefore "excellent", while 4B is worthy
of a grade 4 but does have some blemishes, usually filler.
[We have
an example of an auction house
report on another webpage.]
The difficulty
for the UK buyer of a "fresh RV8 import" is how
to check the quality of the car. Checking this auction
report (if the car came from auction) is the best way. It
should be available if you are buying the car from the actual
importer. It is not always possible to keep track of these
bits of paper if the car passes through several hands before
it reaches a UK forecourt - if it is not available, a full
inspection is advisable."
Footnote:
Chris Watkins lived in Japan for 12 years, and now returns
every couple of months to visit auctions. Advice and answers
are freely given on these topics - HS Imports can be contacted
on 01458 441543 or at mgimports@aol.com.
Their website is worth visiting at www.hsimports.com
as it usually has examples of their current stock on display.
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