Emmisions testing

Discussion in 'Off-Topic' started by speedyham, Feb 15, 2008.

  1. speedyham
    Offline

    speedyham Well-Known Member

    Likes Received:
    1
    Trophy Points:
    103
  2. Justin
    Offline

    Justin Well-Known Member

    Likes Received:
    22
    Trophy Points:
    273
    my comment is....donate to SEMA so they can continue to fight it.
     
  3. Chux
    Offline

    Chux Well-Known Member

    Likes Received:
    1,489
    Trophy Points:
    398
    pretty sure I can drive my current car at ~25mpg for an awful long time before it would be cheaper for me to buy one that gets 30-35.
     
  4. piddster
    Offline

    piddster Lone Wolf

    Likes Received:
    15
    Trophy Points:
    123
    I'm glad my car is 15 years old :)
     
  5. project/driven
    Offline

    project/driven Well-Known Member

    Likes Received:
    88
    Trophy Points:
    213
    It looks like this legislation only deals with new vehicle to be sold, at least what I read there. It makes no mention of reverting to old system of testing every car every year. As tight a pawlenty seems to be I can't imagine freeing up the millions of dollars it would take to open all the testing stations and hire all the workers to run them. He would likely veto a new tax to fund this, and existing programs are almost impossible to cut.
     
  6. webcrawlr
    Offline

    webcrawlr Well-Known Member

    Likes Received:
    7
    Trophy Points:
    223
    I think it's a great idea. How can reducing our carbon foot print and lessening our dependency on foreign oil be bad?

    The title is also wrong. It says nothing about testing, only forcing auto manufactures to higher standards on new cars (by 2016).