Mick,
You make some very good points. I wonder if you have seen the current requirements, which came into force on Jan 31 2015?
https://www.vicroads.vic.gov.au/...eme-from-31-january-2015I don't want to get into a VIC vs NSW argument, as it is pointless and counter productive, and we will never agree anyway.
Like Frank, I don't use the club registration scheme personally, so have no particular axe to grind, apart from disliking seeing it abused.
Most of the issues you mention have been addressed already, and if you talk to real club members in Victoria (as opposed to Facebook, or those forums where few words contain more than four letters) you will find that the scrutiny by Vicroads and by the police has increased enormously. Some of this is due to articles in the press, and a lot due to pressure by car clubs and the AOMC who recognise that the feral minority will wreck the scheme for legitimate users.
As you note, some of the aforementioned feral minority regarded the scheme as cheap registration with no RWC requirements.
VSI33 now defines precisely what is required, for licensed roadworthy testers, the police, and the users of the system.
I disagree with your comment that the scheme has been "tightened up slightly". It is as robust as the normal registration scheme. The wild modifications with out VASS certification you mention are no more permissible under club registration than under full registration, and never have been, it's just that now there is no grey area at all.
As for 12 monthly RWC tests for vehicles over 3 years old, personally I see the sense in it, the motor trade love it, but no Victorian state government has as yet had the will to pursue it. Particularly as the RACV has been very vocal in their disapproval and the voting majority seem to oppose it.
25 or 30 years - I don't see how this will really make much difference - is a VL turbo more appropriate and somehow less attainable than a VN? Not really.
I think you will find the fly by nighters have been sprung and dealt with, probably as a result of being dobbed in by legitimate car club members. We are aware that the fringe dwellers could jeopardise the entire scheme and the majority will suffer the consequences.
Previously many cars were transferred to club registration without an RWC. This loophole has now been eliminated.
As I conceded earlier, unfortunately there are cars which need to be dealt with as a legacy of the previous more relaxed rules, but I know they are on borrowed time, from Vicroads, from the police and from the clubs themselves. Regardless of what plates are on the car, beyond certain modifications all cars in Victoria have to comply with the same requirements.
I haven't seen much on the NSW scheme, apart from the flowery political announcement in the link posted earlier, which was big on rhetoric and short on detail.
How, for example, will the NSW scheme prevent the grey nomads you mention registering their rusty VW Kombi or Hi Ace, and how does it improve on the existing Vicroads arrangements? (Apart from not suffering the legacy vehicles).
If there are variations in the NSW scheme which are an improvement I would personally like to see the requirements harmonised between the states.