Registering a Vespa 50cc
Registering a Vespa 50cc
Hi there,
I am just about to buy a 50cc Vespa smallframe, 1964. I was wondering what the registration rules are on this due to not needing number plates,
Thanks
I am just about to buy a 50cc Vespa smallframe, 1964. I was wondering what the registration rules are on this due to not needing number plates,
Thanks
In Sweden, with the old laws (before 2003), to ride a moped you needed no driver´s license and the moped needed no registration. To ride it you only had to be 15 years old and the moped had to be restricted to 1 hp. Which means "Swedish" Vespa 50:s untouched are dead slow
These laws are still valid for these old mopeds. So buy it, ride it and be happy. You only need to be 15 and have at least third party insurance ("trafikförsäkring") on the moped.
/jens

These laws are still valid for these old mopeds. So buy it, ride it and be happy. You only need to be 15 and have at least third party insurance ("trafikförsäkring") on the moped.
/jens
scooterdaddy - gammal är äldst
Nope, in practice you cannot convert an old 30 kph moped to anything else, as far as the law's concerned at least. If you tune it, it's a motorbike that cannot be registered and by definition cannot be used on public roads. You will not be able to register it as any kind of motorcycle or other type of moped. You could try registering it as a home buit motorcycle, but that would involve modern laws on emission, indicators, headlamp quality etc etc. Not really feasiblesquidge wrote:So if say it starts out as a normal 50cc, doesnt go above 30kph, then as soon as it is tuned and goes above 30kph you then need to get it re-tested, is that right?
M

In practice the police doesn't seem to concerned about moderately tuned old mopeds, but that's another story...
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Good supply on spares and such can be found at EM Scooters in Gothenburgh and EHR Motor in Stockholm. Also there are some good online-shops in Germany (SIP Scooter, Scooter Center Köln, etc)
I generally don't recomend people to buy stuff from England if it's available in Germany (or Sweden) since freights are generally more expensive (and hassle seems to be more abundant).
EM Scooters has a good article on tuning a Swedish V50, written in Swedish though...http://www.emscooters.se/webshop/mektip ... sp?mekId=5
Mind you the main problem is not the cylinder, but the crancshaft and the primary gearing, wich is a bit of a bigger operation to change.
/JM
I generally don't recomend people to buy stuff from England if it's available in Germany (or Sweden) since freights are generally more expensive (and hassle seems to be more abundant).
EM Scooters has a good article on tuning a Swedish V50, written in Swedish though...http://www.emscooters.se/webshop/mektip ... sp?mekId=5
Mind you the main problem is not the cylinder, but the crancshaft and the primary gearing, wich is a bit of a bigger operation to change.
/JM
Vespa Rally 221 -73
Vespa Primavera 130 -81
Vespa 50S -65
Lambretta LI 150 s1 -59
Isomac Napolissima -05
Vespa Primavera 130 -81
Vespa 50S -65
Lambretta LI 150 s1 -59
Isomac Napolissima -05
Depends on where you live. EHR Motors in Stockholm, EM Scooters in Göteborg and BD Scooters somewhere further up north are the main Swedish dealers in scooterparts, but many of us buy from abroad, mainly from SIP Scootershop in Germany.
/jens
EDIT: Du var snabbare på avtryckaren Jonas
/jens
EDIT: Du var snabbare på avtryckaren Jonas

scooterdaddy - gammal är äldst
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- Joined: Fri 23 May 2003, 19:34
- Location: Stockholm
- Contact:
Most of us use a combination I think. At least I do. It's nice to have a local shop to go to sometimes, but the prices in Germany are tempting. Just remember that the prices on SIP are without german taxes wich comes as a sweet little surprice at the end...
/JM
/JM
Vespa Rally 221 -73
Vespa Primavera 130 -81
Vespa 50S -65
Lambretta LI 150 s1 -59
Isomac Napolissima -05
Vespa Primavera 130 -81
Vespa 50S -65
Lambretta LI 150 s1 -59
Isomac Napolissima -05
I believe they are with German tax, 19%, but you have to pay Swedish tax, 25%. The difference between the taxes, is the surprise you have to pay.primavera133 wrote:Most of us use a combination I think. At least I do. It's nice to have a local shop to go to sometimes, but the prices in Germany are tempting. Just remember that the prices on SIP are without german taxes wich comes as a sweet little surprice at the end...
/JM
