Seen this a few time lately and OP: I'm not having a dig at you personally, this is a general observation.
'Hope' isn't a word I use when dealing with MoT checks.
I either 'know' it will pass, or I 'know' it will fail unless some remedial work is done beforehand. It happens every year, so it's not like we've all forgotten what gets checked, is it?
To 'not know' just seems a bit rubbish to me. Like not knowing if there's fuel or oil in the car, or how many seats it's got.
Brakes a bit iffy? - look at them and see... the fact that your stopping-distances are getting longer are a pretty good indicator that the pads might be on the way out (there's even a light that's supposed to come on to warn us).
Maybe some welding needs doing? Or the CV rubbers are cracked? Get underneath with a torch and have a look then. Bulbs blown? Change them. Tyres cracked or worn - look at them and check first.
It goes on.
Emissions are about the only thing that most of us can't check ourselves, but if it was OK last year (and the year before, etc etc etc) and has been running well in the meantime there's no reason to suppose they'll be significantly different if you've maintained everything as you should...
Best of luck with it Mike, i'm sure you'll be ok
As for Rob's comments and in my experience, probably 99% of the driving population wouldn't have a clue where to top up the oil, or check the brakes, even the lights, it goes on. As enthusiasts and speaking for myself, yes i know where to look and what to check and repair 90% of issues,(welding being the one i'm brilliant at, arent i chaps)but there is always the unknown, and that is usually the guy with the clipboard.
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Whatever you do to ensure it passes an MOT can be totaly undone by the tester having had a bad day...
and the MoT is only valid on the day it's tested.