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  1. #1 NHSTA 
    Senior C-Moto Guru MJH's Avatar
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    Here is list manufacturers that the STATE of New Jersey believe “have obtained NHSTA certification”, however there is no such thing, the NHSTA does not certify vehicle
    http://www.nj.gov/mvc/pdf/Vehicles/mc_manufacturers.pdf


    The NHSTA only shares information and investigate violations if and when they are brought to their attention.


    They in that offer a database and it is here.
    http://www.nhtsa.gov/cars/rules/manufacture/


    Three criteria must be meet under CRF 49 That’s code of federal regulations title 49.


    The manufacturer as the OEM, that being who actually makes the vehicle must be registered with the SAE and represented within its WMI data base, that is one, the NHSTA only links to the SAE database they do not maintain it. The NHSTA augments and maintain files associated with a manufacturers WMI and those fall under the above regulations parts 565, that two and 566, is the third criteria.


    Here are the regulations parts, see above, and below, that are required


    49 CFR 565 - VEHICLE IDENTIFICATION NUMBER (VIN) REQUIREMENTS


    And


    49 CRF 566-Manufacrturers Identification


    Here is the issue and may be confusing to laypeople, the OEM is the factory and represented in the WMI however part 566 requires the OEM to identify the name of who represents their products legally in the USA. The term manufacturer here actually means the agent of process, who is selling the vehicles, the legal entity that maintains the records of sales, what they sell and to who they sold it to.


    So when anyone accesses the NHSTA lookup if the parts 565 and 566 are empty then the manufacture cannot sell the vehicle in any state, they are not meeting federal transportation regulations.


    Also every vehicle must have a EPA certificate and also be affixed with a decal that states the vehicle meets FMVSS, that decal is not provided by any federal agency it’s the factory that installs it and its them making a statement that they understand the laws and that the vehicle meets those standards set in the laws.
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  2. #2 Re: NHSTA 
    Senior C-Moto Guru MJH's Avatar
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    The checklist for any State in the USA before a Title and registration can be issued would be.


    Does the vehicle have EPA certification?
    Is the manufacturer meeting federal procedural regulations 49 CRF parts 565 and 566?


    I can assure you the list NJ created is not valid.


    Such a list would have to have vehicles that have current EPA certificates, but only if the manufacturer of those meets the requirements of 49 CRF parts 565 and 566.


    I believe that the EPA should not offer any certificates, to any manufacturer that is not compliant to federal transportation laws.


    I also believe it is the states responsibility to verify any claim of formal operations in their state made to the NHSTA. That being before the EPA offers a certificate on a vehicle they should validate with the NHSTA and further the NHSTA should not propagate part 566 with information about the state agent of process until they verify with that state such a business entity in fact exists.


    The multiple uses of the term “manufacturer” is causing confusion.


    The EPA needs to add a field, that needs to be the “agent of certification” that being who stands behind the application and testing data. Then the terms “manufacturer” can only represent what must match part 566 of 49 CRF and only when the state of operation validates the existence of that agent of process. The term OEM has to match the WMI listed with the SAE.


    I was told that this is not possible because the federal government cannot dictate to the federal government what to do. They cannot enforce federal regulations on themselves? I am being sarcastic, the issue is that the EPA, NHSTA, SAE are not functionally aligned, they confuse the states and the results are pretty obvious in NJ.
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