Title: 2006 NMEDA CONFERENCE Long Beach, California
12006 NMEDA CONFERENCELong Beach, California
- Theresa Lacuesta
- National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
- Office of Vehicle Safety Compliance
- February 9, 2006
2Agenda
- NHTSAs Mission
- Make Inoperative Rule and Part 595
- Definitions of Modifiers and Alterers
- Light Vehicle Tire Placard Requirements
- Weighing Vehicles to Determine Load Carrying
Capacity - NHTSA Enforcement
- Platform Lift Interlock Requirements
- Applicability of Advanced Air Bags to Mobility
and Make Inoperative Rule - Proposed Rulemaking on Side Impact Protection
- Proposed Rulemaking on Roof Crush Resistance
3National Highway Traffic Safety Administrations
Mission
- Responsible for reducing deaths, injuries, and
economic losses resulting from motor vehicle
crashes - Establishes and enforces safety performance
standards for motor vehicles and equipment - Promotes safe driving and use of safety equipment
- Conducts research on driver behavior and traffic
safety - Provides consumer information on vehicles and
safety equipment
4Make Inoperative Prohibition and Limited
Exemptions for Modifiers
- 49 U.S.C. 30122 prohibits a manufacturer,
distributor, dealer, or motor vehicle repair
business from making inoperative, in whole or in
part any part of a device or element of design
installed on or in a motor vehicle or motor
vehicle equipment in compliance with an
applicable Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard
(FMVSS) - 49 CFR Part 595, Subpart C Vehicle
Modifications To Accommodate People With
Disabilities, effective 4/30/2001, allows
limited exemptions from make inoperative, based
on the needs of the person with a disability, for
a motor vehicle repair business to make specified
modifications to or removal of federally-required
(FMVSS) safety equipment after first retail sale
5Modifiers Part 595
- Motor vehicle repair business is defined in 49
U.S.C. 30122 as a person holding itself out to
the public to repair for compensation a motor
vehicle or motor vehicle equipment the term
modifier is used in these slides to represent a
motor vehicle repair business that modifies a
vehicle after first retail sale. - A modifier cannot use the exemptions unless the
vehicle has already been sold to the purchaser
(for purposes other than resale). For purposes of
Part 595, the "first retail sale" is the point at
which the seller of the vehicle and the end user
enter into a sales contract that identifies a
specific vehicle to be delivered. - Registration with NHTSA is a prerequisite for
using any exemption that affects the
certification of a vehicle. Any repair business
or individual who modifies vehicles after the
first retail sale to accommodate persons with
disabilities must register to take advantage of
any of the exemptions afforded under the rule. - Alterers
- Alterer is defined in 49 CFR 567 as a person who
alters by addition, substitution, or removal of
components (other than readily attachable
components) a certified vehicle before the first
purchase of the vehicle other than for resale
Alterations also include changes to GVWR, GAWR or
vehicle type that are different from the
vehicles original certification (see 49 CFR
567.7) - An alterer must certify that the vehicle meets
all applicable Federal Motor Vehicle Safety
Standards affected by the alteration.
6New Requirements of FMVSS No. 110
- Effective 9/1/2005, passenger cars, and trucks,
MPVs, and buses with GVWR 4,536 kg (10,000 lb)
must have new tire safety labels affixed to the
drivers side B-pillar or door edge, that show
tire information for the tires installed at the
time of first purchase - a Vehicle Placard or
- the combination of a Vehicle Placard and an
optional Tire Information Pressure Label (both
are shown below) - Required Information
- - Vehicle capacity weight
- - Designated seating capacity
- - Cold tire inflation pressure for front, rear,
and spare tires - - Tire size designation
- For vehicles built in 2 or more stages
Incomplete and intermediate vehicle manufacturers
are not allowed to affix labels final-stage
manufacturers must affix labels - Alterers must affix a new label over the original
label(s) if information is no longer valid
Sample Tire Label (optional)
Sample Vehicle Placard
Vehicle Capacity Weight
7FMVSS No. 110 (continued)
- In addition to tire size and inflation pressure
information, the Vehicle Placard requires
information for seating capacity and vehicle
capacity weight (cargo and luggage load plus 68
kg (150 lb) x seating capacity). - However, a vehicles capacity weight may be
incorrect if, for example, a vehicle dealer
installs optional equipment after the vehicle was
certified and before first sale. The dealer could
replace the Vehicle Placard but this would be
difficult and error on the Placard could result. - In August 2005, NHTSA published a Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) to permit the dealer
in the example above to install a separate label
(shown below) next to the Vehicle Placard stating
that additional weight has been added to the
vehicle if the weight added is greater than 0.5
of GVWR, reducing the vehicles rated cargo
carrying capacity by that amount. - As indicated in an October 4, 2005 letter to
M.Kastner of NTEA (Docket No. NHTSA-2004-17917-16)
, the agency also decided to provide interim
relief, allowing dealers to use the proposed
label immediately.
Sample Dealer Label
8Weighing Vehicles to Determine Cargo Carrying
Capacity
- ALTERERS
- For motor vehicles with a GVWR of 10,000 pounds
or less, alterers may immediately comply with the
proposed FMVSS 110 requirements of the August 31,
2005 NPRM (70 FR 51707) - if the added weight of the modification is equal
to or less than 0.5 of the vehicles GVWR, no
action is required. (i.e. 43 lb for an 8600 lb
GVWR) - if the added weight of the modification exceeds
0.5 of the vehicles GVWR, a separate label in
lieu of a new placard may be installed next to
the original tire placard. To fill out this
additional label, dealers need to know only the
total weight effect of added/replaced items.
Dealers can provide the information without
weighing vehicles. - The vehicle capacity weight listed on the
placard cannot exceed the difference between the
GVWR specified by the manufacturer and the
unloaded vehicle weight.
9Weighing Vehicles to Determine Cargo Carrying
Capacity
- MODIFIERS
- 49 Part 595.7 (e)(5) Requirement for modifiers
of vehicles for accommodating people with
disabilities - The required document of this section shall
Indicate any reduction in the load carrying
capacity of the vehicle of more than 100 kg (220
lb) after the modifications are completed. In
providing this information, the modifier must
state whether the weight of a users wheelchair
is included in the available load capacity.
10NHTSA Enforcement
- Office of Defects Investigation (ODI)
- Preliminary Evaluation (opened Jan. 2006)
- Missing weld in vertical arms of Ricon
S-Series/K-Series platform lifts Manufacture
date 6-12-2005 through 7-1-2005 - Manufacturers defect (Part 573) report to NHTSA
dated 1-23-2006 - Office of Vehicle Safety Compliance (OVSC)
- On-going Platform Lift Inspections
- 2006 FY Compliance Test Program to FMVSS Nos. 403
404 - OVSC will investigate all instances of freight
and other type lifts installed in motor vehicles
for use by persons with disabilities
11FMVSS No. 403 Platform Lift Interlock Requirements
- FMVSS 403, S6.10 The platform lift system must
have interlocks or operate in such a manner when
installed in a vehicle according to the
installation instructions, to prevent - Forward or rearward mobility of the vehicle
unless the lift is stowed. - Operation of the lift from the stowed position
until forward and rearward mobility of the
vehicle is inhibited. - Stowing of the lift when occupied by portions of
a passengers body, and/or a mobility aid (not
applicable to passive lifts or lifts that
manually stow). - Movement of the platform up or down unless the
inner roll stop is deployed. - Movement of the platform up or down, throughout
the range of passenger operation, when the
platform surface is above a horizontal plane 3
in. above the ground level loading position,
unless the wheelchair retention device required
is deployed throughout the range of passenger
operations. - Deployment of the outer barrier when it is
occupied by portions of a passengers body or
mobility aid throughout the lift operations. - Deployment of any inner roll stop, when the inner
roll stop is occupied by portions of a
passengers body or mobility aid throughout the
lift operations.
12FMVSS No. 208 Advanced Air BagsApplicability
to Mobility and Make Inop.
- NHTSA published a final rule August 31, 2005
updating the make inoperative exemptions to
address modifications to vehicles with advanced
air bags (FMVSS 208), advanced head protection
requirements (FMVSS 201"U") and child restraint
anchorages LATCH Lower Anchors and Tethers for
Children (FMVSS 225). - New exemptions for FMVSS 208 are sections S14
thru S27. These sections are applicable to
vehicles up to 8500 lb GVWR. - The rules for who may use these exemptions are
the same as the original make inoperative the
exemptions are only for modifiers who customize a
vehicle for a particular person after first
retail sale. Alterers must certify vehicles to
all applicable FMVSS.
13FMVSS No. 214 Side Impact Protection
- NHTSA published a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
(NPRM) on FMVSS 214 on May 17, 2004. - NHTSA goal improve side impact protection to
prevent head and other injuries, including
smaller occupants. - Proposed side impact upgrade to test
requirements - New 20 mph, 75-degree oblique vehicle into pole
test new dummies in front
seats only,
Passenger
vehicles up to 4,536 kg (10,000 lb) - Average adult male dummy
- Small adult female dummy
- Existing moving barrier dynamic test new dummies
in front and rear seats, Passenger vehicles up to
2,722 kg (6,000 lb) - Average adult male dummy
- Small adult female dummy
14FMVSS No. 216 Roof Crush Resistance
- NHTSA published a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
(NPRM) on FMVSS 216 on August 23, 2005. - NHTSA goal improve roof crush protection as part
of a comprehensive rollover plan to reduce death
and injuries. - Proposed rule is applicable to passenger vehicles
up to 10,000 lb GVWR. It also allows vehicles
manufactured in two or more stages, other than
chassis-cabs, to be certified to the roof crush
requirements of FMVSS No. 220, instead of FMVSS
No. 216. - Proposed upgrade to test requirements
- Increase strength to weight ratio to 2.5 times
the Unloaded Vehicle Weight. - Head room reduction requirement No contact with
50th percentile dummy in normal seating position. - NHTSA expects to publish a final rule by July 1,
2008.
15REFERENCESNON-LEGAL ISSUES
- NHTSA Contact FMVSS Nos. 403/404
- William Evans
- Safety Standards Engineer
- Office of Crash Avoidance Standards
- phone 202.366.2272
- william.evans_at_nhtsa.dot.gov
- NHTSA Contact - FMVSS Nos. 110/ 403/
404 - Theresa Lacuesta
- Safety Compliance Engineer
- Office of Vehicle Safety Compliance
- phone 202.366.2319
- theresa.lacuesta_at_nhtsa.dot.gov
- NHTSA Contact Part 595
- Gayle Dalrymple
- Safety Standards Engineer
- Office of Crash Avoidance Standards
- Phone 202.366.5559
- gayle.dalrymple_at_nhtsa.dot.gov
- NHTSA Contact FMVSS No. 216
- Amanda Prescott
- Safety Compliance Engineer
- Office of Vehicle Safety Compliance
- Phone 202.366.5359
- amanda.prescott_at_nhtsa.dot.gov
16REFERENCES
- LEGAL ISSUES
- NHTSA Contact FMVSS Nos. 208 / 403/ 404
- Chris Calamita
- Office of Chief Counsel
- phone 202.366.2992
- christopher.calamita_at_nhtsa.dot.gov
- NHTSA Contact - FMVSS Nos. 110 / 216
- George Feygin
- Office of Chief Counsel
- phone 202.366.2992
- george.feygin_at_nhtsa.dot.gov
- NHTSA Contact - FMVSS No. 214
- Dee Fujita
- Office of Chief Counsel
- phone 202.366.2992
- dee.fujita_at_nhtsa.dot.gov