The below editorial is an excerpt from our full review.
To access the full content library please contact us on 0330 0020 227 or click here

USED CAR JARGON UNDERSTANDING IT

A good start is to make yourself aware of the meanings of commonly used - and misused - terms in the used car market.

The Used Car Market Jargon Buster

A Ringer: A ringer is a stolen vehicle with a false identity. The name comes from the phrase 'dead ringer', as the stolen vehicle has the registration number - and often the VIN (Vehicle Identification Number) - of another car.

Clone: The identity of the car is duplicated onto another car and provides duplicate and forged documents. Thus seemingly identical cars are driving around with the same number plate.

Cut & Shut: Sections of different vehicles (often crashed or unroadworthy) are welded together to make one car.

Clocking: The odometer mileage reading is changed to increase the value of the car. Often difficult to detect.

VIN: Vehicle Identification Number (VIN, or chassis number), a much better identifier than the registration plate. The VIN usually has 17 digits, and is found on a metal plate in the engine bay of the car. It is also stamped into the car's floor, usually near the driver's seat.

Paper car fraud: The car doesn't actually exist, except on paper. A fraudster might then try to get finance to buy this fictitious “paper” car.

Lemon: A dud car; a bad buy. Mechanically unsound or a vehicle with a dubious ...

This is an excerpt from our full review.
To access the full content library please contact us on 0330 0020 227 or click here

Client login

Mobile
Narrow
Narrower
Normal
Wide