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English guide on how to read a Japanese DL

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English guide on how to read a Japanese DL

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Old Feb 12, 2013, 11:08 am
  #1  
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English guide on how to read a Japanese DL

So long story short, I'm trying to get the local Road Traffic Office in India to understand my Japanese driving licence. I have a certified translation, but of course that doesn't entirely help, since it indicates merely I have a "normal" licence for driving "regular" vehicles.

Mr Officious at the RTO wants something more than that. Is anyone in possession of, or do they have a pointer to, an official-looking guide on how to interpret a Japanese driving licence that is written in English?
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Old Feb 12, 2013, 2:50 pm
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Something like this? Or even more detailed?

http://www.budgetrentacar.jp/common/image/sample01.gif
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Old Feb 12, 2013, 3:06 pm
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Perhaps this Wikipedia article on Japanese vehicle classifications will satisfy the RTO? It provides some information about the meaning of "normal": http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vehicle...ss#cite_note-3

Sure, it's Wikipedia, so Mr. Officious might not accept it. If that's the case, you might be able to find an English translation of the Japanese documents that it cites.
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Old Feb 12, 2013, 7:17 pm
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IMHO it's possible this problem might be easily solved by paying the officer a "translation" fee.
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Old Feb 13, 2013, 1:24 am
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Originally Posted by 5khours
IMHO it's possible this problem might be easily solved by paying the officer a "translation" fee.
Depending on the OP's level of experience in the country, he might do well to get a local to propose and negotiate this "translation fee" on his behalf. This should mitigate the possible consequences of a "misunderstanding".
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Old Feb 13, 2013, 1:36 am
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If the official were able to assist with the help of a "translation fee", I assume that he would have already taken the initiative to propose such a solution?
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Old Feb 13, 2013, 2:22 am
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Originally Posted by hailstorm
If the official were able to assist with the help of a "translation fee", I assume that he would have already taken the initiative to propose such a solution?
I'm not familiar with the culture. You may be right. All the more reason to rely on local experts to navigate through this.
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Old Feb 13, 2013, 9:20 am
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India has a multitude of very low-cost translation agencies, much to the dismay of us translators in Western countries. Since a translation of a driver's license doesn't have to be elegant prose, perhaps you could find one of them to translate your driver's license for literally pennies per word.
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Old Feb 13, 2013, 12:19 pm
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I already have a certified translation; which is the really annoying thing. I have already provided the Wikipedia page too.

They are asking questions like "where does it indicate this it is a Class 1 licence?", and do not seem satisfied that Class 1 gives a subset of the rights of Class 2 and that these are the only classes that exist.

I've only been in India for six months, but I already recognise this type of behaviour as the prelude to a suggestion that a gratuity will ease the way.
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Old Feb 13, 2013, 3:10 pm
  #10  
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Sometimes I wish that such gratuities were accepted in Japan. I had to take the driving test to convert my license four times before I finally met their petty requirements that only apply on the test course...
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Old Feb 13, 2013, 11:34 pm
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Originally Posted by hailstorm
Sometimes I wish that such gratuities were accepted in Japan. I had to take the driving test to convert my license four times before I finally met their petty requirements that only apply on the test course...
International license works pretty well in Japan. Easy to pick up at a AAA office.
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Old Feb 13, 2013, 11:55 pm
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Originally Posted by 5khours
International license works pretty well in Japan. Easy to pick up at a AAA office.
Only for the first year you are in Japan. After that, converting to a Japanese license is mandatory.
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Old Feb 14, 2013, 1:54 am
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Originally Posted by hailstorm
Only for the first year you are in Japan. After that, converting to a Japanese license is mandatory.
Officially yes.
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Old Feb 14, 2013, 2:18 am
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Originally Posted by 5khours
Officially yes.
Yeah. Well, unofficially I expect you can carry on using your international license for several years ... provided you have no reason to interact with the law. But if, for instance, you have a prang and the rozzers get involved, I would expect reality to match the official position - and the lack of a valid license could create some problems. Do you know different?
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Old Feb 14, 2013, 5:07 am
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Originally Posted by 5khours
Officially yes.
Officially nothing. It was a cool loophole 15 years ago, but now if they find you using nothing but a valid international license while having lived in the country for more than a year, they will haul your ... to jail, and possibly deport your ... out of the country.
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