grandad wrote:
In our disciplinary system you get 3 penalty points for "having a bald tyre". I have tried umpteen times over the years since this was introduced to get them to change the wording to say "illegal" but for some reason they wont change it.
To me a bald tyre doesn't even mean something borderline legal or even slightly below the minimum tread - it means more like very little tread or no tread at all
Interesting to compare the definitions from three of the big UK dictionaries:
Collins:If a tyre is bald, its surface has worn down and it is no longer safe to use.
Oxford:(of a tyre) having the tread worn away.
‘the Nissan had two bald tyres’Cambridge:a bald tyre is one that has worn away to become very smooth and is therefore dangerous:
The tyre was completely bald.They're all a bit vague and could be read in different ways, but the third one is probably more consistent with how I think of it - very little or no tread.
But legally I suspect 'bald' is meaningless unless it's specifically defined, so any council using the word is being intentionally vague, for whatever reason.
Which, of course, is why in the national law there's a reasonably precise definition of when a tyre is legal, and when it isn't.