Hi Richard, that's the point of all this, the Irish customs are making it difficult, as usual and as they always did in the past, before the Eu rules were applied, to import anything from the UK now that the UK is no longer an EU member.
Another small example - my wife used to buy chicken stock cubes from Tesco's, but about two months after Brexit happened all Tesco's stock cubes, with the exception of vegetable stock cubes, disappeared of the shelves here. When I asked why it turned out that there are ingredients sourced in the UK and the EU but made in the UK, and to have the items sold in the EU Tesco have to provide certificates of origin for every single item used in the manufacture. So Tesco just stopped selling them here. To be able to buy them we have to go up to Northern Ireland, although recently there have been occasional times when some have appeared in some stores.
If, in my case, all that I require is the commodity codes that wouldn't be to bad. My guy has those, and they are on the customs document on the front of the package. It is the other stuff that becomes a problem, full itemised commercial invoice which clearly states country of origin, and description of goods. The commercial Invoice must be on the sender’s company letterhead. The guy that I am buying the parts from is a fairly normal P38 breaker, who supplies parts all over the UK, and having spoken to him this afternoon, he admits that he isn't set up to export to the EU.
Anyway, I have decided to email LR France, from whom I have bought before, and hopefully they will come back to me with a n affordable [just about] price for new ABS Wabco sensors, although I suspect that I will be faced with a €600/€700 bill for four items. If they come in too expensively then I will buy spurious items and hope that the two front ones, once replaced, will last.
My current issue to having to buy and fit two new fuel pipes from the fuel tank. I got a contact to pump out the tank, but when we dropped out the tank we found the pipes are badly corroded, and we had to put everything back together again - very carefully !! So that's another €500, on top of the cost of the two new rear air bags, the new handbrake pads, the new propshaft rubber doughnut, a new rear UJ. I also need a new gearbox oil cooler fan switch [£120 or thereabouts] plus the front ABS/traction control sensors !! And the possibility that I may need to buy and fit new new EAS levelling sensors, around £110 a piece - a further £600.
Unfortunately, things are getting to get rather out of hand, especially when the car spends more time being repaired than being driven these days. I have spent around €2500 with a distance driven of 120 miles this year, so far. And this month I need to pay €1100 in road tax for the next twelve months.
A BMW X5 hybrid is really starting to look cheap, as the road tax is only €170 a year here, and the insurance is the same as the P38, around €650 a year. The only downside is the cost to import a 2016 X5, in total about €30,000 including paying around £20,000 for the car itself in the UK.
So, important decisions to be made. If I could get a good price for the P38 then I probably would sell it, but even with a lot of new spare parts fitted I probably won't get much over €3000 for it. People don't really want them over here, particularly with the cr** coming from customs over import duties etc. etc.
I will give the Donkey Sanctuary a ring and see if they will do me an exchange instead !!
Pierre3.