RecklessWOT
Full Access Member
- Joined
- Feb 20, 2015
- Posts
- 2,556
- Reaction score
- 4,764
- Location
- New Hampshire
- First Name
- Kevin
- Truck Year
- 1987
- Truck Model
- V10 Suburban Silverado
- Engine Size
- 350 TBI
I am aware some states do so, never figured you were making it up. I simply said MOST states, not all. The county my father lives in in Colorado tests all vehicles 1975 and up as well, and we all know California is crazy with the emissions.For anyone wondering about this there are states that test back into the 70s. In the areas of Oregon that emission testing is done they do it on all vehicles 1976 and newer, no I'm not making that up.
But I live about as far away from Oregon as one can get. I don't know of anywhere in the northeast that is so strict, most places around here have an exemption on vehicles over 25 years, if not sooner (as in NHs case where they no longer check anything that's not OBDII, much of Maine does not test any vehicle even new ones), even crazy liberal places like MA and CT.
It is straight up unreasonable to expect a 40 year old vehicle to be reliably be held to the same standard as when it was new, and there are so few of them on the road that the owners are most likely enthusiasts/collectors and the vehicle is not stock to begin with. A couple dirty old cars on the road is not making a difference when the majority of the cars on the road are <15 years old.
I think this is one of the reasons no new vehicle (with maybe a rare exception), has come out in a long time with true duel exhausts, instead you might get single 3" or bigger pipe. It's not uncommon for a V-8 exhaust to come together in Y-pipe, go through the cat, muffler and then split and come out looking like duels.
I'm pretty sure it's done as a cost saving measure, and to save room. Super high end sports cars still have real dual exhaust, as do race cars. But on your average car, even something "sporty" they just make it a single (maybe with dual outlets to look cool) because the advantage isn't large enough to justify having two separate exhaust pipes, two sets of cats, two sets of o2 sensors, making all that extra room underneath the cramped modern cars, etc.
I REALLY doubt they're doing anything to make our exhaust, or anything else for that matter, last longer. The more stuff that needs fixing, the more money they make in replacement parts and repairs. Hence people are always saying "they don't make them like they used to".
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