From 1 July 2009, the Department for Planning and Infrastructure became the Department of Planning and the Department of Transport. State Land Services and Pastoral Leases became part of the Department of Regional Development and Lands.

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DOT Home | Licensing Home | Your vehicle | Vehicle safety | Vehicle faults and maintenance

Vehicle faults and maintenance


Faults such as worn steering components; defective or bald tyres; spongy brakes or faulty headlights may make a motor vehicle dangerous to the driver, passengers or other road users.

Therefore, all vehicles should be checked, maintained and serviced regularly. Items that need to be checked regularly include:

  • tyres
  • structural rust
  • brakes
  • lights
  • steering

Maintenance

Common indicators of faults include:

1. tyres that have:  

2. brakes that

 

  • a tread depth worn to less than 1.5mm

  • damage to the tyre carcass.

  • feel spongy when applied

  • need to be pumped before applied

  • grab or pull to one side.

3. lights that:

  4. steering that:  

  • won't work

  • have cracked lenses

  • have blown globes

  • are incorrectly aimed (headlights).
  • allows the vehicle to wander all over the road

  • has excessive free play

  • requires continual correction

Further details about vehicle faults and maintenance can be found in the its ticking over smoothly...or is it? brochure (pdf 2.7MB)

Simple day-to-day maintenance can also improve the safety of your vehicle and result in substantial savings in running costs and repairs.

These include checking:

  • tyre pressures
  • brake fluid levels
  • coolant levels
  • engine oil levels
  • the windscreen washing bottle level.

Department of Transport