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Vehicle inspection

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Vehicle emissions inspection station
A Massachusetts state inspection sticker

Vehicle inspection is a procedure mandated by national or subnational governments in many countries, in which a vehicle is inspected to ensure that it conforms to regulations governing safety, emissions, or both. Inspection can be required at various times, e.g., periodically or on transfer of title to a vehicle. If required periodically, it is often termed periodic motor vehicle inspection; typical intervals are every two years and every year.

In some jurisdictions, proof of inspection is required before a vehicle licence or license plate can be issued or renewed. In others, once a vehicle passes inspection, a decal is attached to the windshield, and police can enforce the inspection law by seeing whether the vehicle displays an up-to-date decal. In the case of a vehicle lacking a windshield (e.g., a trailer or motorcycle), the decal is typically attached to the vehicle body.

With regard to safety inspection, there is some controversy over whether it is a cost-effective way to improve road-traffic safety.[1][2]

Contents

[edit] Australia and Oceania

Each Australian State has the authority to set its own laws pertaining to vehicle inspections. Most jurisdictions have some form of safety and/or emissions inspection, although Western Australia does not.[citation needed]

[edit] New South Wales

Vehicles over five years old are required to obtain an e-Safety Check prior to registration renewal [3]

[edit] Queensland

Queensland Transport requires any vehicle to have a safety inspection (and the resulting Safety Certificate prominently displayed) before it can be offered for sale or have its interstate registration transferred [4]. The inspection checks the general condition of the vehicle itself (suspension, body condition, etc...) and certain items of basic safety equipment such as the tyres, brakes, lights, windshield, etc... The certificate is valid for 1,000 km or 3 months (whichever is sooner) if the vehicle is being offered for sale by a dealer, and for 2,000 km or 2 months if being sold by an individual. There are some exceptions, vehicles being sold in rural parts of the state are exempt if driving to the nearest inspection station would present a hardship, and vehicles that are only being sold for parts likewise do not requirer a safety inspection. Sellers who are required to have a safety certificate but either do not obtain one or fail to display it properly while the vehicle is advertised for sale are subject to a $375 on the spot fine.

There are no periodic safety inspections in Queensland once a vehicle is registered, however, mobile road teams conduct random emissions inspections through a program called OVERT[5], and drivers may be summoned if their vehicles are not within legal guidelines or emits visible smoke.

[edit] Victoria

Similar to Queensland, VicRoads requires that a vehicle being sold, registered from interstate have a current Certificate of Roadworthiness from a licensed vehicle inspector. Additionally, vehicles that are cited by the police for safety defects must also obtain a certificate.

[edit] New Zealand

New Zealand's Land Transport Safety Authority requires most vehicles to maintain a Warrant of Fitness through periodic inspections from licensed inspectors. Cars newer than six years old must be inspected at least once every twelve months; older cars require six-monthly inspections. Some classes of vehicle must instead maintain a Certificate of Fitness, which requires a six-monthly inspection regardless of the age of the vehicle.

[edit] Americas

[edit] Canada

     Emissions test required in some regions      Periodic safety inspection      Both emissions test and safety inspection      Safety inspection upon transfer of the vehicle

Emission testing programs in Canada include AirCare in the Lower Mainland only of British Columbia and Ontario's Drive Clean in Southern Ontario only.

Safety testing regulations vary through the different provinces. In Manitoba for example, upon buying a car (new or used), a valid safety check must be done before it can be registered. Dealerships are required to provide the buyer with a new safety, while private sellers are not (if a private seller so chooses, they may pay for, and issue a new safety in order to make it more appealing to buy). In either case, if the vehicle bought has not had a safety test within the last year, the buyer must safety the vehicle before it can be registered with autopac. From the point the car is registered, no safety test is required as long as the car remains with the current owner (however, if something goes wrong, automechanics and dealerships have the right to refuse to let the client drive out with an unsafe car).

The provinces of New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island require annual safety inspections, in Nova Scotia, a safety inspection is required every two years. Ontario and British Columbia require bi-annual emission testing, although only the Lower Mainland of BC, which includes the city of Vancouver, and the southern part of Ontario, require any testing. The rest of the province is without such legislation.

[edit] United States

In the United States, each state government is free to decide whether to require vehicle safety inspection, as well as the specifics of the inspection program. Not all states require it, most do not; some states that used to require it have discontinued it.[citation needed]

Under the Clean Air Act (1990), states are required to implement vehicle emission inspection programs in metropolitan areas whose air quality does not meet federal standards. The specifics of those programs vary from state to state. Some states, including Kentucky and Minnesota, have discontinued their testing programs in recent years with approval from the federal government.[citation needed]

[edit] States and Federal Districts with periodic (e.g., annual) vehicle safety inspections
  • Delaware (every year or every two years; brand new cars are exempt for the first four years provided the car remains with the same owner. Older cars registered as antiques do not require emissions testing.)
  • District of Columbia (every two years[6])
  • Hawaii (every year, except brand new vehicles receive an inspection valid for two years, ambulances, rental cars, vehicles used in public transportation, and other, every six months)
  • Louisiana (every year; emission test in the Baton Rouge metropolitan area)
  • Maine (every year; emission test in Cumberland County[7])
  • Massachusetts (safety and emissions annually, cars manufactured prior to model year 1996 are not subject to emissions testing. [8])
  • Mississippi[9] (safety inspection every year)
  • Missouri[10] (every two years[11]; emissions testing in the St. Louis area)
  • New Hampshire (every year, emissions testing for vehicles equipped with OBD-II (model year 1996 and newer) [12])
  • New Jersey (safety and emissions testing every two years, brand new cars are exempt for the first four years provided the car remains with the same owner. Older cars registered as antiques do not require emissions testing.)
  • New York (safety and emissions test every year, method of emissions testing varies by county of registration: tail pipe emissions testing in New York City as well as the counties of Nassau, Suffolk, Westchester and Rockland, OBD-II emissions testing in upstate counties)
  • North Carolina (every year; emissions inspections in 48 of 100 counties (1996-newer, except new cars), exempting diesels and cars 35 years or older. Starting Nov 1, 2008 there won't be an inspection decal issued upon passing. [13])
  • Pennsylvania[14]every year for most vehicles; every six months for tractor-trailers, school vehicles (including school buses and school vans), motor coaches, mass transit buses, ambulances, firetrucks, etc.; emissions inspections every year in 25 of 67 counties (stricter in the Pittsburgh and Philadelphia metro areas) (no emission inspection for diesel vehicles)[15])annual inspection, emission, and semi-annual inspection stickers are color-coded, which tells which year they expire. This makes it easier for police to track down expired stickers.
  • Rhode Island (safety and emission inspection every two years)
  • Texas (every year; emission test in the largest urban areas - Houston Metro, Dallas Metroplex, Austin, San Antonio, and El Paso)
  • Utah (every two years for the first eight years, then every year)
  • Vermont (every year)
  • Virginia[16] (every year;[17] emission inspection every two years in urban and suburban jurisdictions in Northern Virginia[18])
  • West Virginia[19] (every year - safety)

[edit] States with safety inspection only required prior to sale or transfer
  • Maryland[20] (emission inspection required every two years in all counties)[21])

[edit] States which only require federally mandated emissions inspections
  • Alaska (Municipality of Anchorage and Fairbanks North Star Borough) every two years, depending on age and type of vehicle
  • Arizona (Phoenix and Tucson metro areas only) annually, depending on age and type of vehicle [22])
  • California (for most ZIP Codes, every two years for all vehicles made after 1975 which are more than six years old)
  • Colorado (in some localities, every year or two, depending on age and type of vehicle [23])
  • Connecticut (every two years[24])
  • Georgia (metropolitan Atlanta area only[25], every year, most recent three model year cars are exempt)
  • Illinois (Chicagoland and eastern suburbs of St. Louis, Missouri)
  • Indiana (Lake and Porter counties only, every two years)
  • New Mexico (Albuquerque metro area)[26]
  • Nevada (Clark County and Washoe County areas)
  • Ohio (Cuyahoga, Geauga, Lake, Lorain, Medina, Portage, and Summit counties only)Cars that are 4 years old or less do not have tested, after that period they have to tested. Testing is based on a odd-even year system. If a car was bought in 2000, it wont tested until 2010, if a car was purchased in 2003, then it will need to be tested in 2009. Franklin County (Columbus) and Hamilton County(Cincinnati) will also have be under emission testing effective in 2010. Ohio does not charge a fee for emission testing, due to Ohio's tobacco settlement.
  • Oregon (Portland and Medford metro areas only) [27]
  • Washington (urban areas of Clark, King, Pierce, Snohomish and Spokane counties)
  • Wisconsin (Kenosha, Milwaukee, Ozaukee, Racine, Sheyboygan, Washington and Waukesha; every two years)

[edit] Other States
  • Alabama
  • Arkansas
  • Florida
  • Idaho
  • Iowa
  • Kansas
  • Kentucky
  • Minnesota
  • Montana
  • Nebraska
  • North Dakota
  • Oklahoma - Discontinued Safety Inspections c.2006
  • South Carolina
  • South Dakota
  • Tennessee
  • Wyoming

[edit] European Union

The Council directive 96/96/EC of 20 December 1996 mandates all member states to carry out periodic safety and emission inspections for most types of motor vehicles. It also sets minimum requirements for those inspections and their intervals - for light commercial vehicles (up to 3.5 t) and private cars (up to 8 seats) the first inspection shall occur no later than 4 years and at a frequency of up to 2 years thereafter. All other types of vehicles shall be subject to yearly inspection (busses, vans, trucks, trailers, taxis, ambulances, coaches). Vehicles from the military and fire departments are exempted from the directive.

[edit] Austria

Austrian decal

In Austria, all vehicles must undergo a "Wiederkehrende Begutachtung nach § 57a KFG" (recurring inspection following section 57a of the motor vehicle statute). A decal is placed on the vehicle's windscreen (usually the upper left-hand corner as seen from outside the vehicle), hence the inspection itself is colloquially referred to as "Pickerl" (literally: sticker). The color of the decal is white for vehicles with a catalytic converter, and green for vehicles without one. Punch holes indicate the month and year that the next inspection is due. However, the inspection can be carried out one month in advance of that date and up to four months after the one indicated on the decal. (The vehicle remains roadworthy during that time). Unless the inspection is overdue in the sense described above, the roadworthiness certificate is transferable, meaning a potential new owner will get a new decal with the same date, but the corrected license plate number upon registration of her vehicle. However, not merely the old decal, but also the latest official inspection report will have to be presented for this purpose.

The first inspection on new passenger cars is required after three years, another one two years on, while thereafter passenger cars must pass the official inspection each and every year to remain roadworthy. Heavy trucks and motorcycles must undergo annual inspections from the very first year. Inspections are carried out by specially licensed garages and by Austria's two major automotive clubs. The Austrian motor vehicle inspection covers both aspects of vehicle safety and emissions standards.

[edit] Finland

Finland has a long tradition of vehicle inspection, dating back to year 1917. Vehicle inspection was initially carried by cities and provincial inspectors but starting from year 1968 the inspection moved to national governing body of road vehicle administration known as Autorekisterikeskus. In 1994 the vehicle inspection was opened for competition and in 1996 Autorekisterikeskus was split as administrative body Ajoneuvohallintokeskus (AKE) and inspection company Suomen Autokatsastus Oy. Nowadays, Ajoneuvohallintokeskus governs the inspection companies and keeps track of inspection quality and the inspections are carried by private companies. [28] During the years, the inspection procedures and facilities have improved greatly and nowadays the quality of inspection is on such level that mechanical failures as immediate cause for fatal crashes in whole country are minimal. [29]

In Finland, the "Määräaikaiskatsastus" (periodic inspection) is required for all passenger cars, vans, trucks, ATVs and for trailers with maximum structural weight of more than 750 kilograms. [30] Inspection interval depends on vehicle class and usage. For privately-used passenger car, inspection must be carried after three and five years counting from the specified date of first deployment and every year after fifth year. For privately-used van, the first inspection must be carried after three years and every year after third year. If there is no specified date of first deployment (for instance 00.00.1987) the time of inspection is determined by the last number of license plate. The inspection period also varies depending on vehicle class and usage but for privately-used passenger cars and vans the length of the period is four months preceding the date specified in date of first deployment or four months preceding the last date of inspection specified by the license plate number.

The periodic inspection includes verification of vehicle register information (VIN, taxes, insurance), a test drive, brake testing, inspection of lights and compulsory equipment, superficial inspection for visibility and handling hindrances and bodywork, undercarriage inspection for suspension parts and corrosion and emission measurements (requirements vary depending on propellant and date of first deployment). The emission measurement can be taken on a registered repair shop prior to the inspection. If done so, a proper measurement certificate must be shown at inspection. Upon passed inspection, a new "Part one" of registration certificate is printed and handed to customer among with inspection report. If inspection fails, the faults found during the inspection must be repaired and the vehicle needs to be shown at the same inspection station for "Jälkitarkastus" (recheck) within one month of the inspection.

[edit] Germany

German decal

Germany requires safety inspection and emission inspection every two years for passenger cars. New passenger cars have to obtain their first roadworthiness certificate after three years. Heavy duty vehicles need to be presented to the vehicle inspection authorities (e.g. TÜV, DEKRA, KÜS, GTÜ, ...) every year. The safety inspection decal is placed on the rear license plate; the emission inspection decal is placed on the front license plate (the emission decal on the front plate will be phased out until 2010 and then be part of the safety inspection).

[edit] Ireland

In Ireland, the National Car Test (NCT) is required for cars 4 or more years of age to be inspected for various items, such as brakes, lighting, bodywork condition, emissions, etc. A disc which must be displayed on the windscreen is issued to cars that pass the test. The disc is valid for two years, after which the car must then be re-tested.

[edit] The Netherlands

In The Netherlands the "Algemene Periodieke Keuring" (APK) or General Periodical Inspection is mandatory for vehicles aging 3 - 50 years. The inspection of vehicles up to 30 years old is annual, bi-annual for vehicles from 30-50 years old, older vehicles are exempt. The inspection includes conforming to safety and emission standards in force in the year of first introduction of the car. Registration is all digital and public[1], there are no longer visible stickers or decals on the vehicle, but the paper inspection report must be carried in the car.

[edit] United Kingdom

The Ministry of Transport test (more usually: MOT - pronounced by spelling out the letters) is a mandatory annual test of safety, roadworthiness and exhaust emissions for vehicles over three years old.

[edit] Sweden

Svensk Bilprovning AB ("bilprovningen") tests the road worthiness of cars once every year for modern cars, every second year for cars classified as veteran/classic cars (currently occurring when the car reaches age 30). When a vehicle passes inspection, road tax and insurance have been paid, the owner receives an adhesive sticker to attach to the rear license plate, thus making it easy for the police to see if a vehicle is roadworthy.

[edit] Turkey

Until 2008 the vehicle inspection was limited to administrative checks (whether all taxes have been paid) and a visual check if the car matches the documents. In August 2005 the Turkish government decided to introduce a vehicle inspection scheme following the directive 96/96/EC of the European Union. Since there was no technical equipment available for real roadworthiness tests a contract was laid out with the German TÜV SÜD that was presenting itself for the task in syndication with two Turkish corporations. The TÜV Türk trust is given a monopoly on car inspection for 20 years. Beginning with 2009 the TÜV test is mandatory for all cars with the inspection scheme to follow the German inspection scheme - however there is a transition period up to 2013 where established TÜV regulations are not followed as strictly as in mainland Europe. The shift in vehicle inspection policies is nevertheless rather sharp - since the old vehicle inspection service was strickened with corruption no staff members were taken over to the TÜV Süd, the internal inspection protocol is stricter than in Germany as to prevent any corruption. The introduction of the TÜV was accompanied with a strong propaganda program to agitate the requirement for a modern inspection scheme (e.g. the number of fatal road accidents was three times as high as in mainland Europe despite most of the country to be very rural). Additionally, it is expected that the connection with the German Turks allows for most citizens to have some knowledge how to cope with the TÜV inspection scheme.

[edit] Asia

[edit] Japan

Under the Japanese shaken (車検) program, when a vehicle turns 3 years old, it must get an inspection every two years.

[edit] China

Chinese Rural Vehicle (CRV) operators can be subject to fine by authorities (police) if the vehicle emits visible smoke. Regulations are administered by province/economic region/city as appropriate. New vehicles must pass regulations (Euro spec) in effect on the day of manufacture. CRVs are responsible for about half of all vehicle emissions in the PRC.[31]

[edit] References

  1. ^ "Cost-Effectiveness of Periodic Motor Vehicle Inspection" University of Michigan (U.S.A.) Transportation Research Institute, January 1985 (PDF file)
  2. ^ "Cost Effectiveness of Periodic Motor Vehicle Inspection", report for the (Australian) Federal Office of Road Safety, April 1999 (PDF file)
  3. ^ e-Safety Check
  4. ^ Safety certificates
  5. ^ Vehicle emissions testing
  6. ^ District of Columbia: Department of Motor Vehicles - Services - Inspections
  7. ^ State Police: Vehicle Inspections & Crashes: Motor Vehicle Investigations
  8. ^ http://www.massvehiclecheck.com/
  9. ^ Frequently Asked Questions
  10. ^ http://www.mshp.dps.mo.gov/MSHPWeb/PatrolDivisions/MVID/index.html
  11. ^ 11c50-2:11c50-2.qxd.qxd
  12. ^ Saf-C 3200
  13. ^ http://www.ncdot.org/dmv/vehicle_services/emissioninspection/requirements.html from North Carolina Department of Transportation Division of Motor Vehicles
  14. ^ PENNDOT Driver and Vehicle Services - Vehicle Safety Inspections
  15. ^ (PA DEP I/M - Drive Clean Pennsylvania Program Maps
  16. ^ Commonwealth of Virginia Department of Motor Vehicles
  17. ^ Virginia Motor Vehicle Safety Inspection Program, from the Virginia State Police
  18. ^ Emissions Inspections, Virginia (U.S.A.) Department of Motor Vehicles
  19. ^ DMV Vehicle License Information
  20. ^ Vehicle Safety Inspection
  21. ^ VEIP Program Description
  22. ^ Arizona Vehicle Emissions Program
  23. ^ Colorado Motor Vehicle Emissions Program
  24. ^ CT Emissions Testing
  25. ^ Georgia Clean Air Force
  26. ^ Emission Testing - Vehicle Pollution Management - City of Albuquerque
  27. ^ Oregon DMV Emissions Testing & DEQ Requirements
  28. ^ AKE - AKEn historiaa
  29. ^ http://www.ake.fi/AKE/Ajankohtaista/Vuoden+2008+tiedotteet/Katsastusta+tehostamalla+ei+enää+voida+merkittävästi+vähentää+vakavia+onnettomuuksia.htm
  30. ^ FINLEX - Ajantasainen lainsäädäntö: 19.12.2002/1245
  31. ^ http://www.its.ucdavis.edu/publications/2004/UCD-ITS-RR-04-01.pdf

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

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