[Code of Federal Regulations]

[Title 40, Volume 31]

[Revised as of July 1, 2006]

From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access

[CITE: 40CFR1051.115]



[Page 620-621]

 

                   TITLE 40--PROTECTION OF ENVIRONMENT

 

         CHAPTER I--ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY (CONTINUED)

 

PART 1051_CONTROL OF EMISSIONS FROM RECREATIONAL ENGINES AND VEHICLES

--Table of Contents

 

          Subpart B_Emission Standards and Related Requirements

 

Sec.  1051.115  What other requirements must my vehicles meet?



    Your vehicles must meet the following requirements:

    (a) Closed crankcase. Crankcase emissions may not be discharged 

directly into the ambient atmosphere from any vehicle throughout its 

useful life.

    (b) [Reserved]

    (c) Adjustable parameters. Vehicles that have adjustable parameters 

must meet all the requirements of this part for any adjustment in the 

physically adjustable range. Note that parameters that control the air-

fuel ratio may be treated separately under paragraph (d) of this 

section. An operating parameter is not considered adjustable if you 

permanently seal it or if it is not normally accessible using ordinary 

tools. We may require that you set adjustable parameters to any 

specification within the adjustable range during any testing, including 

certification testing, production-line testing, or in-use testing.

    (d) Other adjustments. This provision applies if an experienced 

mechanic can change your engine's air-fuel ratio in less than one hour 

with a few parts whose total cost is under $50 (in 2001 dollars). 

Examples include carburetor jets and needles. In the case of carburetor 

jets and needles, your vehicle must meet all the requirements of this 

part for any air-fuel ratio within the adjustable range described in 

paragraph (d)(1) of this section.

    (1) In your application for certification, specify the adjustable 

range of air-fuel ratios you expect to occur in use. You may specify it 

in terms of engine parts (such as the carburetor jet size and needle 

configuration as a function of atmospheric conditions).

    (2) This adjustable range (specified in paragraph (d)(1) of this 

section) must include all air-fuel ratios between the lean limit and the 

rich limit, unless you can show that some air-fuel ratios will not occur 

in use.

    (i) The lean limit is the air-fuel ratio that produces the highest 

engine power output (averaged over the test cycle).

    (ii) The rich limit is the richest of the following air-fuel ratios:

    (A) The air-fuel ratio that would result from operating the vehicle 

as you produce it at the specified test conditions. This paragraph 

(d)(2)(ii)(A) does not apply if you produce the vehicle with an unjetted 

carburetor so that the vehicle must be jetted by the dealer or operator.

    (B) The air-fuel ratio of the engine when you do durability testing.

    (C) The richest air-fuel ratio that you recommend to your customers 

for the applicable ambient conditions.

    (3) If the air-fuel ratio of your vehicle is adjusted primarily by 

changing the carburetor jet size and/or needle configuration, you may 

submit your recommended jetting chart instead of the range of air-fuel 

ratios required by paragraph (d)(1) of this section if the following 

criteria are met:

    (i) Good engineering judgment indicates that vehicle operators would 

not have an incentive to operate the vehicle with richer air-fuel ratios 

than recommended.

    (ii) The chart is based on use of a fuel that is equivalent to the 

specified test fuel(s). As an alternative you may submit a chart based 

on a representative in-use fuel if you also provide instructions for 

converting the chart to be applicable to the test fuel(s).

    (iii) The chart is specified in units that are adequate to make it 

practical for an operator to keep the vehicle properly jetted during 

typical use. For example, charts that specify jet sizes based on 

increments of temperature smaller than 20 [deg]F (11.1 [deg]C) or 

increments of altitude less than 2000 feet would not meet this criteria. 

Temperature ranges must overlap by at least 5 [deg]F (2.8 [deg]C).

    (iv) You follow the jetting chart for durability testing.

    (v) You do not produce your vehicles with jetting richer than the 

jetting chart recommendation for the intended vehicle use.

    (vi) The adjustable range of carburetor screws, such as air screw, 

fuel screw, and idle-speed screw must be defined by stops, limits, or 

specification



[[Page 621]]



on the jetting chart consistent with the requirements for specifying jet 

sizes and needle configuration in this section.

    (4) We may require you to adjust the engine to any specification 

within the adjustable range during certification testing, production-

line testing, selective enforcement auditing, or in-use testing. If we 

allow you to submit your recommended jetting chart instead of the range 

of air-fuel ratios required by paragraph (d)(1) of this section, adjust 

the engine to the richest specification within the jetting chart for the 

test conditions, unless we specify a leaner setting. We may not specify 

a setting leaner than that described in paragraph (d)(2)(i) of this 

section.

    (e) Prohibited controls. You may not design your engines with 

emission-control devices, systems, or elements of design that cause or 

contribute to an unreasonable risk to public health, welfare, or safety 

while operating. For example, this would apply if the engine emits a 

noxious or toxic substance it would otherwise not emit that contributes 

to such an unreasonable risk.

    (f) Defeat devices. You may not equip your vehicles with a defeat 

device. A defeat device is an auxiliary emission-control device that 

reduces the effectiveness of emission controls under conditions that the 

vehicle may reasonably be expected to encounter during normal operation 

and use. This does not apply to auxiliary emission-control devices you 

identify in your certification application if any of the following is 

true:

    (1) The conditions of concern were substantially included in the 

applicable test procedures described in subpart F of this part.

    (2) You show your design is necessary to prevent vehicle damage or 

accidents.

    (3) The reduced effectiveness applies only to starting the engine.

    (g) Noise standards. There are no noise standards specified in this 

part 1051. See 40 CFR Chapter I, Subchapter G, to determine if your 

vehicle must meet noise emission standards under another part of our 

regulations.



[67 FR 68347, Nov. 8, 2002, as amended at 70 FR 40488, July 13, 2005]