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Hawkeye
15th March 2006, 21:43
Ok, I arrived from the UK 10 years ago. after 1 year had to get my NZ licence. Sat the scatchy, had an interview with PC Plod after having to get cert for eye test, and got my Licence for life (been driving on full cage for 20 years). 2 Years later they change the rules and I now have to apply for another Licence. Due to medical reasons, I fail the eye test again. (Don't have full binocular vison due to accident when I was younger, so have to get cert from opticians). Licence only valid for 2 years (to align it to '5th' birthday). 2 years later on my '5th' birthday, fail eye test so back to the opticians. Now got 10 year licence. 6 months later, buy bike. Need another licence. Need to take yet another eye test (which I fail). Back to the opticians. In 4 months time, I will apply for my restricted. Guess what? Another eye test (which I'll fail). Back to the opticians. 3 months later I apply for my full licence. You guessed it, yet another visit to the opticians due to failed eye test.

I've been in NZ for 10 years. Had to renew my licence 5 times up to now. Failed the eye test everytime so had to get cert from the opticians. Still got another 2 to go to get my full so......

Can someone tell me that this isn't just a revenue collection.
46% fail the eye test. The opticians are laughing all the way to the bank.

Just a note: From the horses mouth ie. the top eye specialist in NZ which I went to see the first time. 'You don't need full binocular vision to drive. Maybe I was wrong to recommend that machine!' Doh! do you think so! :crazy:

Pathos
15th March 2006, 23:22
I secretly hold one eye closed at a time in the eye test... I can read the damn thing then.

The eye tests are stupid, they should just change it so you can to the eye test with the eye of your choice. But then again they aren't eye specialists and if your eyes aren't 'perfect' they need the word of a specialist.

prehaps save yourself the time and get the cert beforehand.

bugger about the law changes...but I've got 4 licences in the last 3 years myself...

GR81
16th March 2006, 06:32
our government is a joke... what more do you need to know? :Pokey:

Motu
16th March 2006, 06:45
My wife doesn't have binocular vison,but she only had to sit that one for the photo licence...and she knows how to ''pass'' the test.

Hawkeye
16th March 2006, 07:52
prehaps save yourself the time and get the cert beforehand.




It's not the time factor. I do get the cert first now. It's the cost of having to get the cert because I know I'm going to fail the test.
I only renewed my cage licence 6 months ago but when I went for my bike learners, I still had to pay for a new licence, pay for an eye cert and get a new photo and signiture. 6 months later I have to repeat the whole process for my restricted. 3 month later, repeat again for my full. So in a 15 month period I will have paid for 4 licences and 4 eye certs, had my photo taken and had to sign 4 times.

Clockwork
16th March 2006, 07:59
Makes you wonder what they were thinking. Obviously you don't need binocular vision to drive, otherwise people who are blind in one eye would never be able to get a drivers licence.

You might consider sending these details to your local MP or may be the Minister of Transport. Ask if they can justify the "binocular vision test" and if not, ask what they would consider doing about it.

magicfairy
16th March 2006, 08:00
fail eye test so back to the opticians.
A tip - if you know you will fail eye test (I would as I have poor vision on one eye) go to the optician first and get a fit to drive certificate. Present that when you renew and you won't have to do their eye test at all. Also my optician told me that the test you have to pass at an optician if you FAIL the eye test at testing centre is tougher than just getting the cert first.

Grahameeboy
16th March 2006, 08:03
Not a biggy, don't worry about it.....it makes sense from a safety point of view and we are not talking about big $$'s.

Back Fire
16th March 2006, 08:12
Not a biggy, don't worry about it.....it makes sense from a safety point of view and we are not talking about big $$'s.

It does add up though, and it is a hassle

bugjuice
16th March 2006, 08:15
that's real bad..
how long do the eye certs last for? can't you just use one for a few tests?

Grahameeboy
16th March 2006, 08:23
It does add up though, and it is a hassle

Geeze...........................

magicfairy
16th March 2006, 09:23
that's real bad..
how long do the eye certs last for? can't you just use one for a few tests?
You have to present one that is no more than 3 months old from memory. So I usually book in a few days before I renew.

Clockwork
16th March 2006, 10:35
You have to present one that is no more than 3 months old from memory. So I usually book in a few days before I renew.

Another inconsistency... everyone else's eye test is good for 10 years!!

Lou Girardin
16th March 2006, 11:00
The eye testing machines at the AA were known by the LTNZ to be inadequate from the start. But the stupid punters pay so who cares?

MSTRS
16th March 2006, 11:05
Another inconsistency... everyone else's eye test is good for 10 years!!
....or until your renewal date, which ever comes first.

Hawkeye
17th March 2006, 19:20
Went to the AA. They are ademant that you need to either pass the eye test or have a current cert. (jobs worth syndome). Therefore around $40each time I need to take an eye test prior to the licence. 4 licence = around $240 + 4 eye tests around $160 = $400 in 15 months. Add to that WOF and insurance. Not cheap for your first couple of years riding.....

Flatcap
17th March 2006, 20:01
I secretly hold one eye closed at a time in the eye test... I can read the damn thing then.

The eye tests are stupid, they should just change it so you can to the eye test with the eye of your choice. But then again they aren't eye specialists and if your eyes aren't 'perfect' they need the word of a specialist.



when I did my last test I closed one eye - it was much easier to read. Then I swapped eyes and it was two completely different lists of letters. How the hell are you supposed to read a list with binocular vision when each eye is looking at a different list?