In Kansas there are no emissions laws or annual inspections. The entire state gets a full air change every 10 minutes -so why bother? We also benefit from no mandated vehicle inspections -ever. The only thing that does get a check is the odometer and VIN, but only when a title transfer occurs. The state is more interested in indentity than safety of the machines the public chooses to play caroms with.
IIRC, California and many states have an amendment to their respective emissions law that states that once a car is more than XX years old, they are considered 'antique' and exempt from the law. The threshold ranges from 20 to 30 years, depending on state/county. Another point of trivia is that a fresh oil change and new air filter prior to having your vehicle smog tested will improve the emissions results. At one time there was available OTC a fuel additive that one could deploy to further skew the results in your favor. Kyle Ehler '73 and '76 914 2.0 'Euro' antiques -----Original Message----- From: Pettit, Ghery [mailto:ghery.pet...@intel.com] Sent: Friday, January 04, 2002 10:28 AM To: 'James, Chris'; 'Ken Javor'; Doug McKean; EMC-PSTC Discussion Group Subject: RE: EMC-related safety issues Chris, Annual inspections of motor vehicles are done on a state by state basis, rather than as a national requirement in the U.S. Automobiles are registered at the state level, so the federal government doesn't get involved. Some states have annual inspections, others don't. Likewise, smog inspections are at a state or lower level. California cars get smogged. Here in Washington it depends on what county you live in. If air quality in your county is good enough, you don't have to have your car smogged. If not, you get to pay more for the privilege of having a car. I live in a county where I don't have to deal with the fight. BTW, a trick I learned when I lived in California is that you stand a much better chance of passing the smog test if the engine is well warmed up when you arrive at the inspection station. Take it for what it's worth. Be thankful that we don't have to have annual inspections on our cars to the extent that one does on an airplane... $$$ Ghery Pettit Intel -----Original Message----- From: James, Chris [mailto:c...@dolby.co.uk] Sent: Friday, January 04, 2002 1:02 AM To: 'Ken Javor'; Doug McKean; EMC-PSTC Discussion Group Subject: RE: EMC-related safety issues Sorry disagree about turn and brake lights not being in the same class. Their very failure is often the reason for very serious accidents. I have long wished that all car manufacturers had to by law fit bulb failure warning devices to cars (but what happens when that fails). In the UK it is an offence to drive a vehicle with defective lights, (although many do). It is the driver's (not owner's) obligation to be satisfied the vehicle they are driving is fit to be on the road irespective of whether it passed it's MOT the previous day. The UK mandatory annual vehicle inspection (MOT) for vehicles over 3 years old, covers seat belts, brake efficiency on a rolling road, mirrors, windshield cracks (a 20mm, 3/4inch crack in the wrong place will fail a vehicle), tyres, wheel bearings, gaiters, steering components, structural body condition, lights, smog emissions, etc....................I don't believe airbags are tested but guess it will come, along with the inevitable hike in price. I'm surprised the US does not have a similar Federal requirement - with all the vehicles this is a cash cow waiting to be milked. Chris -----Original Message----- From: Ken Javor [mailto:ken.ja...@emccompliance.com] Sent: 04 January 2002 02:40 To: Doug McKean; EMC-PSTC Discussion Group Subject: Re: EMC-related safety issues A signal light is easily replaceable in terms of time and money. Most people don't use them (well, in good old Huntsville, AL, anyway, where a favorite bumper sticker reads, "Turn signals, not just for smart people anymore"). Failure of a light is not in the same class as an airbag deploying at the wrong time or not deploying, or ditto for brakes. ---------- >From: "Doug McKean" <dmck...@auspex.com> >To: "EMC-PSTC Discussion Group" <emc-p...@majordomo.ieee.org> >Subject: Re: EMC-related safety issues >Date: Thu, Jan 3, 2002, 7:00 PM > > > Point taken Ken, but consider signal lights. They're > essentially safety devices and they're supposed to > be maintained on cars which have been transferred > amongst several owners and are decades old. > Same idea with windshields, I guess also. > > - Doug McKean > > > ------------------------------------------- > This message is from the IEEE EMC Society Product Safety > Technical Committee emc-pstc discussion list. > > Visit our web site at: http://www.ewh.ieee.org/soc/emcs/pstc/ > > To cancel your subscription, send mail to: > majord...@ieee.org > with the single line: > unsubscribe emc-pstc > > For help, send mail to the list administrators: > Michael Garretson: pstc_ad...@garretson.org > Dave Heald davehe...@mediaone.net > > For policy questions, send mail to: > Richard Nute: ri...@ieee.org > Jim Bacher: j.bac...@ieee.org > > All emc-pstc postings are archived and searchable on the web at: > No longer online until our new server is brought online and the old > messages are imported into the new server. > ------------------------------------------- This message is from the IEEE EMC Society Product Safety Technical Committee emc-pstc discussion list. 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Visit our web site at: http://www.ewh.ieee.org/soc/emcs/pstc/ To cancel your subscription, send mail to: majord...@ieee.org with the single line: unsubscribe emc-pstc For help, send mail to the list administrators: Michael Garretson: pstc_ad...@garretson.org Dave Heald davehe...@mediaone.net For policy questions, send mail to: Richard Nute: ri...@ieee.org Jim Bacher: j.bac...@ieee.org All emc-pstc postings are archived and searchable on the web at: No longer online until our new server is brought online and the old messages are imported into the new server. ------------------------------------------- This message is from the IEEE EMC Society Product Safety Technical Committee emc-pstc discussion list. Visit our web site at: http://www.ewh.ieee.org/soc/emcs/pstc/ To cancel your subscription, send mail to: majord...@ieee.org with the single line: unsubscribe emc-pstc For help, send mail to the list administrators: Michael Garretson: pstc_ad...@garretson.org Dave Heald davehe...@mediaone.net For policy questions, send mail to: Richard Nute: ri...@ieee.org Jim Bacher: j.bac...@ieee.org All emc-pstc postings are archived and searchable on the web at: No longer online until our new server is brought online and the old messages are imported into the new server.