[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 40, Volume 30]
[Revised as of July 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 40CFR1048.125]

[Page 550-552]
 
                   TITLE 40--PROTECTION OF ENVIRONMENT
 
         CHAPTER I--ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY (CONTINUED)
 
PART 1048_CONTROL OF EMISSIONS FROM NEW, LARGE NONROAD SPARK-IGNITION 
ENGINES--Table of Contents
 
          Subpart B_Emission Standards and Related Requirements
 
Sec. 1048.125  What maintenance instructions must I give to buyers?

    Give the ultimate buyer of each new nonroad engine written 
instructions for properly maintaining and using the engine, including 
the emission-control system. The maintenance instructions also apply to 
service accumulation on your test engines, as described in 40 CFR part 
1065, subpart E.
    (a) Critical emission-related maintenance. Critical emission-related 
maintenance includes any adjustment, cleaning, repair, or replacement of 
air-induction, fuel-system, or ignition components, aftertreatment 
devices, exhaust gas recirculation systems, crankcase ventilation 
valves, sensors, or electronic control units. This may also include any 
other component whose only purpose is to reduce emissions or whose 
failure will increase emissions without significantly degrading engine 
performance. You may schedule critical emission-related maintenance on 
these components if you meet the following conditions:
    (1) You may ask us to approve critical emission-related maintenance 
only if it meets two criteria:
    (i) Operators are reasonably likely to do the maintenance you call 
for.

[[Page 551]]

    (ii) Engines need the maintenance to meet emission standards.
    (2) We will accept scheduled maintenance as reasonably likely to 
occur in use if you satisfy any of four conditions:
    (i) You present data showing that, if a lack of maintenance 
increases emissions, it also unacceptably degrades the engine's 
performance.
    (ii) You present survey data showing that 80 percent of engines in 
the field get the maintenance you specify at the recommended intervals.
    (iii) You provide the maintenance free of charge and clearly say so 
in maintenance instructions for the customer.
    (iv) You otherwise show us that the maintenance is reasonably likely 
to be done at the recommended intervals.
    (3) You may not schedule critical emission-related maintenance more 
frequently than the following intervals, except as specified in 
paragraph (a)(4) of this section:
    (i) For catalysts, fuel injectors, electronic control units, 
superchargers, and turbochargers: the useful life of the engine family.
    (ii) For gaseous fuel-system components (cleaning without 
disassembly only) and oxygen sensors: 2,500 hours.
    (4) If your engine family has an alternate useful life shorter than 
the period specified in paragraph (a)(3)(ii) of this section, you may 
not schedule maintenance on those components more frequently than the 
alternate useful life (see Sec. 1048.101(g)).
    (b) Recommended additional maintenance. You may recommend any 
additional amount of maintenance on the components listed in paragraph 
(a) of this section, as long as you make clear that these maintenance 
steps are not necessary to keep the emission-related warranty valid. If 
operators do the maintenance specified in paragraph (a) of this section, 
but not the recommended additional maintenance, this does not allow you 
to disqualify them from in-use testing or deny a warranty claim.
    (c) Special maintenance. You may specify more frequent maintenance 
to address problems related to special situations such as substandard 
fuel or atypical engine operation. For example, you may specify more 
frequent cleaning of fuel system components for engines you have reason 
to believe will be using fuel that causes substantially more engine 
performance problems than commercial fuels of the same type that are 
generally available across the United States.
    (d) Noncritical emission-related maintenance. For engine parts not 
listed in paragraph (a) of this section, you may schedule any amount of 
emission-related inspection or maintenance. But you must state clearly 
that these steps are not necessary to keep the emission-related warranty 
valid. Also, do not take these inspection or maintenance steps during 
service accumulation on your test engines.
    (e) Maintenance that is not emission-related. For maintenance 
unrelated to emission controls, you may schedule any amount of 
inspection or maintenance. You may also take these inspection or 
maintenance steps during service accumulation on your test vehicles or 
engines. This might include adding engine oil or changing air, fuel, or 
oil filters.
    (f) Source of parts and repairs. Print clearly on the first page of 
your written maintenance instructions that any repair shop or person may 
maintain, replace, or repair emission-control devices and systems. Your 
instructions may not require components or service identified by brand, 
trade, or corporate name. Also, do not directly or indirectly condition 
your warranty on a requirement that the vehicle be serviced by your 
franchised dealers or any other service establishments with which you 
have a commercial relationship. You may disregard the requirements in 
this paragraph (f) if you do one of two things:
    (1) Provide a component or service without charge under the purchase 
agreement.
    (2) Get us to waive this prohibition in the public's interest by 
convincing us the engine will work properly only with the identified 
component or service.

    Effective Date Note: At 69 FR 39259, June 29, 2004, Sec. 1048.125 
was amended by revising

[[Page 552]]

paragraph (a) introductory text and paragraph (d), effective Aug. 30, 
2004. For the convenience of the user, the revised text is set forth as 
follows:

Sec. 1048.125  What maintenance instructions must I give to buyers?

    (a) Critical emission-related maintenance. Critical emission-related 
maintenance includes any adjustment, cleaning, repair, or replacement of 
critical emission-related components. This may also include additional 
emission-related maintenance that you determine is critical if we 
approve it in advance. You may schedule critical emission-related 
maintenance on these components if you meet the following conditions:

                                * * * * *

    (d) Noncritical emission-related maintenance. You may schedule any 
amount of emission-related inspection or maintenance that is not covered 
by paragraph (a) of this section, as long as you state in the owners 
manual that these steps are not necessary to keep the emission-related 
warranty valid. If operators fail to do this maintenance, this does not 
allow you to disqualify those engines from in-use testing or deny a 
warranty claim. Do not take these inspection or maintenance steps during 
service accumulation on your emission-data engines.

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