12-29-2019, 01:01 AM | #45 | |
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It's like big tobacco saying they didn't know their products were addictive. |
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12-29-2019, 01:09 AM | #46 | |
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The chuckleheads shouldn’t ruin it for those using it for legit uses. I know several people who have dedicated track cars and they don’t register them or try and street them because they are law abiding citizens. |
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12-29-2019, 01:20 AM | #47 | ||||||
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12-29-2019, 01:23 AM | #48 | |
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The car industry itself has fallen afoul of CAA regulations as well, with VW's diesel scandal and Honda's cold-engine misfire detection issues in the late 90s. Honda, in particular, tried arguing that their cars were fine as-sold, and it was only after the warranty had expired that they became non-compliant, so the fault was with the owners. The EPA disagreed and won, and forced Honda to provide several 96-97 Civic and Accord models with free tune-ups after 100,000 miles to reduce the tendency to misfire. As with the DMCA, owners of digital content have pursued those who illegally download content online. Someone downloads a torrent, their IP address is traced back to an ISP, and the ISP gives up the person's email address. That person get a nasty-gram from the DCMA's lawyers, and the process works because it's highly automated by scripts. The Clean Air Act plainly states that everyone from the manufacturer to the end user and anyone who services a car has a responsibility to ensure its continued emissions compliance. The EPA's enforcement methods have been more akin to other federal agencies (such as the DEA) in that they pursue sources of illegal contraband far more than the end users of such products. They bust drug producers and attack supply chains, and don't generally bother with end users. So, does it make more sense from a legal and manpower perspective to investigate and sue 10,000 car owners or 5 parts suppliers? Again, the current language of the CAA makes it crystal clear that parts manufacturers must ensure their parts don't increase emissions. Because this is a car community, and lots of people have modified their cars, it's natural for us to want to defend the decisions we've made regarding the things we enjoy. The EPA has a job to do, and if suing manufacturers of non-compliant parts helps them achieve cleaner air, then it's something they're going to do. How, then, do we enforce compliance if the EPA can't sue manufacturers, can't correlate off-road parts manufacturing and sales to actual users, and can't get a budget big enough to pursue individuals that are using these parts on the street? We, as a community, know that these parts are widely used on roads, so perhaps it's a question of what we will tolerate. |
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12-29-2019, 01:32 AM | #49 | |||
The G8X is a disaster. 🤮
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You have my absolute agreement that race cars should be race cars, and I don't see the EPA messing with legit race cars in any way - it doesn't pass the sanity test and would have huge economic implications. ****in' eh. Last edited by FlyingLow78; 12-29-2019 at 01:40 AM.. |
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12-29-2019, 01:45 AM | #50 |
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Simply put, it comes down to freedoms and personal responsibility. Yes, a food manufacturer who makes spicy foods shouldn’t be liable if I’m an idiot and rub it in my eyes. So long as they’re making a product that is safe (i.e. not contaminated) and not using ingredients that are banned, they shouldn’t be infinitely liable for what the end use does with their product.
If the EPA really wanted to make a dent in clean air, they would start to go after states with lax emissions laws and testing requirements. Compared to CA, there’s ton of states where no one even has to worry about running these parts because they don’t have to pass emissions regularly. Look at Japan tuning culture where if you really want to drive a modified car, you have to essentially return it to stock every couple years to pass inspection. Worrying about track cars that started their lives as a street car is practically a non issue. Even the 90% of people using these parts on street cars is a drop in the bucket compared to the overall driving population. And emissions laws don’t always work as intended. I had to drive around unnecessarily just to clear a low tire pressure light on a car before my smog check. I had to actually pollute MORE to clear an error code just to go pass emissions inspection, because if I didn’t it would have failed due to the warning light. As a community, we should be standing up to over-regulation. CA enthusiasts were able to get the exhaust decibel law pulled because of petitioning because it was poorly crafted and allowed cops to ticket unnecessarily. Unless you prefer the government and manufacturers to tell you what you’re allowed to drive. How would you feel about electronically regulated top speeds based on speed limit? Max HP limits? Mandate you can’t drive anything older than 5 years? |
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12-29-2019, 01:53 AM | #51 | |
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a) have not been tested to ensure Clean Air Act compliance, or b) are are suspected of or known to be non-compliant. With smoking, the sheer number of lawsuits associated with tobacco companies proves that public opinion considers it a tolerated activity, but whose side effects are intolerable. Is it fair to say that increasing your car's horsepower with a tune is tolerable, but the decrease in your city's air quality is intolerable? Back in the 80s I lived in the San Joaquin Valley in California. I knew we lived near the Sierra Nevada mountains, but I never saw them. In 2011 I went back to the area for a reunion and saw the mountains from our old house...they were quite imposing and I had no idea the scale of how tall they actually were. California's clean air efforts have made a small, but noticeable difference. I friggin' love this and totally agree. But what about everyone running around with catless downpipes and BM3s? |
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12-29-2019, 01:53 AM | #52 | |
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For example my state (Georgia) doesn't even test diesel.
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12-29-2019, 01:58 AM | #53 | |
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Currently it's against federal law to alter emissions equipment yet people do it all the time because enforcement is difficult if not impossible. Are you saying current law is excessive? BTW Govt already does tell you what you can/can't drive. For example I can't just drive an 18 wheeler.
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12-29-2019, 02:09 AM | #54 | |||
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First, thank you for providing a reasonable, coherent viewpoint on this issue. As others have said, some participants have resorted to name-calling and other nonsense earlier in the thread, and I appreciate reading your perspectives.
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I'm in favor of reasonable regulation, and if the RPM bill passes, my concern is that diesel tuners could have a field day. Rolling coal is so stupid. |
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12-29-2019, 02:13 AM | #55 | |
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If you’re running cat less down pipes on the street and get popped for it, that’s on you. If your local LEO or highway patrol/state police don’t want that ticket money, that’s their choice to make. In CA it’s not unheard of for cops to ask you to pop the hood or poke around under the car to see what you’re running. Too low, too loud, etc.. |
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12-29-2019, 02:16 AM | #56 | |
The G8X is a disaster. 🤮
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https://www.epa.gov/clean-air-act-ov...-air-pollution Some states are ill-equipped to deal with their emissions issues, but I'm sure the people they employ are interested in doing a good job. The EPA is the same, but has a different role. Both have enforcement powers and it's about making the biggest difference with the manpower and budgetary resources you have. |
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12-29-2019, 02:22 AM | #57 | |
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Yeah, you can’t just drive an 18 wheeler, on the street, but if you pass the test for a license you can. Just like you should be able to buy a straight pipe and remove your muffler if it’s for your track car |
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12-29-2019, 02:24 AM | #58 | |
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Also, at what point do the minority of non-compliant vehicles have an unacceptable effect on the majority? Is it similar to a situation where we should tolerate "some" level of littering or armed robberies? I think the exhaust law stemmed partly from a belief that noisy exhausts were emissions non-compliant, but also annoying, so they went about achieving a desired end state the wrong way. |
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12-29-2019, 02:30 AM | #59 | |
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Fully agree that manufacturers shouldn’t get a pass on emissions cheating. They should abide by a higher standard since they are making and selling a product that purports to meet federal standards for safety and other regulations like emissions. Diesel trucks that bellow the smoke from the stacks should be an easy enforcement target - just follow the black smoke. |
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12-29-2019, 02:38 AM | #60 | |
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I think if you had better emissions testing on all vehicles nationally and a bit more enforcement at the local level, you’re probably left with a small enough number of violators who are streeting their cars that it’s a negligible impact. Weigh that versus the impact to the industry and legit track community and I would prefer to err on the side of freedoms. What is annoying is that it’s so subjective. Follow a 70s muscle car which is probably exempt from a bunch of things and you can literally smell the pollution. Compare that to an F80 with a cat less down pipe. I can’t imagine the more modern car with mods is putting out more pollution than a 30 year old larger displacement car with it’s ancient emissions equipment. 1975 and older cars are smog exempt as classic cars. Why? Because there aren’t that many of them. |
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12-29-2019, 02:49 AM | #61 | ||
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Back in the day, Sport Compact Car magazine had an ultimate street car challenge and one of the tests was for tailpipe emissions. An RX-7 had the overall win in the bag, until they saw the numbers from his catless exhaust. A good street car can (and should) be good in all areas. |
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12-29-2019, 02:51 AM | #62 |
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in the mean time, I am waiting for the new year. I am glad that I get to drive two generations of 3 series and might look into purchasing an M2cs.
No never been to Sema. Yes love to tune my cars but if it’s not gonna happen so what. Yes I still have my cats on the cars. No I will not race in my own cars unless I buy a roller car that I can dedicate for racetrack only. Happy New Year all! |
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12-29-2019, 07:26 AM | #63 |
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If a race car has an emissions compliant exhaust, i fail to see how it becomes a deterrent for turning a regular street car into a race car.
But I will say that I've gotten stuck behind plenty of catless exhaust "race" cars and they stink. They also usually run rich so the smell becomes overpowering. This is coming from someone who lives in the shadow of raceway park, so I get the culture. Before long, it'll be batteries anyway. Let it go.
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12-29-2019, 08:24 AM | #64 |
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The last thing we need is another new piece of legislation on the books. If they want to amend an older one fine, but to add one more ambiguous bill to seem relevant when it's time for them say they "did something" while in office is asinine.
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12-29-2019, 11:01 AM | #65 | ||
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We all know those stickers are nothing more than a legal loophole. Cat-less exhaust manufacturers know there's absolutely no way the majority of their products only make it onto only track cars. If that was the case, there would be traffic jams on track days. |
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12-29-2019, 11:22 AM | #66 |
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Im enjoying all the opinion based facts in this thread backed up with random percentages pulled from out of the blue.
An opinion is not a fact, so enough with your percentages unless you have hard data to back it up. You have no idea how many people do or do not track or race their cars. |
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