And Toto too???And they will arrest your little dog too!
Steve.
(The "Wicked Witch of the West" must have trained all the Minnesota DMV workers)
Terry
And Toto too???And they will arrest your little dog too!
Steve.
Thanks!Hey Bogy ,CONGRATS....I went through the same thing when it came right down to the gov making the rules an "knowing the rules " I was glad I had a copy of them in my hand also .
Gary
I think I'll try this at the DMV in Virginia, Mn. first with my Panther and then with the Hiawatha if successful with the first one. I'm assuming in the statement of facts that you would have to state that the engine is 49cc or less. Is that right?bogyman - awesome!!!
which dmv did you go to? i'd like to go to the same one since they've already done it once, and recently.
you also said that besides the VIN, it passed inspection.
So it sounds like to pass inspection, we'll need: horn, mirror, lights, brake light
on the pdf i linked to below, it says, " A moped must meet the same lighting requirements as a motorcycle, with a headlight, taillight and stop lamp"
On mine I have lights, but they are both regular bicycle lights - is that sufficient to meet the requirments? I had a mirror too, but it rattled so much, it rattled itself off and broke - I'll need to figure out something for that
After they said they don't do motorized bikes, you said, "I showed her the documentation that I printed out from the DMV website that contradicted what she was just told." Is this the documentation you showed the DMV? :
https://dps.mn.gov/divisions/dvs/forms-documents/Documents/MotorcycleManual.pdf
Correct me if I'm wrong, but it seems like this is what we need to do:
Step 1 - go to the DMV
-fill out a statement of facts form
-fill out a title form
-bring 4 pictures (i'm assuming a front, side, other side, rear view?)
Step 2 - get inspected
-horn
-lights
-mirror
Step 3 - insurance
according to that pdf, the minimum we need is liability
bogyman - awesome!!!
which dmv did you go to? i'd like to go to the same one since they've already done it once, and recently.
you also said that besides the VIN, it passed inspection.
So it sounds like to pass inspection, we'll need: horn, mirror, lights, brake light
on the pdf i linked to below, it says, " A moped must meet the same lighting requirements as a motorcycle, with a headlight, taillight and stop lamp"
On mine I have lights, but they are both regular bicycle lights - is that sufficient to meet the requirments? I had a mirror too, but it rattled so much, it rattled itself off and broke - I'll need to figure out something for that
After they said they don't do motorized bikes, you said, "I showed her the documentation that I printed out from the DMV website that contradicted what she was just told." Is this the documentation you showed the DMV? :
https://dps.mn.gov/divisions/dvs/forms-documents/Documents/MotorcycleManual.pdf
Correct me if I'm wrong, but it seems like this is what we need to do:
Step 1 - go to the DMV
-fill out a statement of facts form
-fill out a title form
-bring 4 pictures (i'm assuming a front, side, other side, rear view?)
Step 2 - get inspected
-horn
-lights
-mirror
Step 3 - insurance
according to that pdf, the minimum we need is liability
Yep, that's the one I went to.Hey Bogyman - You said you went to the Blaine DMV - do you mean that licensing center by target off of 109th?
It looks like these are the forms we need:
https://dps.mn.gov/divisions/dvs/forms-documents/Documents/MV_StatementofFacts.pdf
https://dps.mn.gov/divisions/dvs/fo...V_TitleandRegisterMotorVehicleApplication.pdf
on the statement of facts form, you said that you put owner for buyer and seller. But what did you put for a VIN since it didn't have one yet, and the model and make?
The title form asks for a VIN, make/model too, as well as purchase price?
I have to chime in right here this quote says it all , the prob ususally lies in our an their learning curve .Once you know how their process works, in retrospect, it doesn't seem all that difficult.
Bogyman57
2+ "chime points" for you!I have to chime in right here this quote says it all , the prob ususally lies in our an their learning curve .
Gary