[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 40, Volume 31]
[Revised as of July 1, 2007]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 40CFR1048.310]

[Page 572-573]
 
                   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 D_Testing Production-line Engines
 
Sec.  1048.310  How must I select engines for production-line testing?

    (a) Use test results from two engines for each engine family to 
calculate the required sample size for the model year. Update this 
calculation with each test.
    (b) Early in each calendar quarter, randomly select and test two 
engines from the end of the assembly line for each engine family.
    (c) Calculate the required sample size for each engine family. 
Separately calculate this figure for HC+NOX and for CO. The 
required sample size is the greater of these two calculated values. Use 
the following equation:
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR13JY05.007

Where:

N = Required sample size for the model year.
t95 = 95% confidence coefficient, which depends on the number 
of tests completed, n, as specified in the table in paragraph (c)(1) of 
this section. It defines 95% confidence intervals for a one-tail 
distribution.
x = Mean of emission test results of the sample.
STD = Emission standard.
[sigma] = Test sample standard deviation (see paragraph (c)(2) of this 
section).
n = The number of tests completed in an engine family.

    (1) Determine the 95% confidence coefficient, t95, from 
the following table:

------------------------------------------------------------------------
         n t95                    n t95                    n t95
------------------------------------------------------------------------
 2 6.31                  12 1.80                  22 1.72
 3 2.92                  13 1.78                  23 1.72
 4 2.35                  14 1.77                  24 1.71
 5 2.13                  15 1.76                  25 1.71
 6 2.02                  16 1.75                  26 1.71
 7 1.94                  17 1.75                  27 1.71
 8 1.90                  18 1.74                  28 1.70
 9 1.86                  19 1.73                  29 1.70
10 1.83                  20 1.73                  30+ 1.70
11 1.81                  21 1.72                  ......................
------------------------------------------------------------------------

    (2) Calculate the standard deviation, [sigma], for the test sample 
using the following formula:
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR13JY05.008

Where:

Xi = Emission test result for an individual engine.

    (d) Use final deteriorated test results to calculate the variables 
in the equations in paragraph (c) of this section (see Sec.  
1048.315(a)).
    (e) After each new test, recalculate the required sample size using 
the updated mean values, standard deviations, and the appropriate 95-
percent confidence coefficient.
    (f) Distribute the remaining engine tests evenly throughout the rest 
of the year. You may need to adjust your schedule for selecting engines 
if the required sample size changes. Continue to randomly select engines 
from each engine family; this may involve testing engines that operate 
on different fuels.
    (g) Continue testing any engine family for which the sample mean, x, 
is greater than the emission standard. This applies if the sample mean 
for either HC+NOX or for CO is greater than

[[Page 573]]

the emission standard. Continue testing until one of the following 
things happens:
    (1) The number of tests completed in an engine family, n, is greater 
than the required sample size, N, and the sample mean, x, is less than 
or equal to the emission standard. For example, if N = 3.1 after the 
third test, the sample-size calculation does not allow you to stop 
testing.
    (2) The engine family does not comply according to Sec.  1048.315.
    (3) You test 30 engines from the engine family.
    (4) You test one percent of your projected annual U.S.-directed 
production volume for the engine family, rounded to the nearest whole 
number. If your projected production is between 150 and 750 engines, 
test engines as specified in paragraph (b) of this section until you 
have tested one percent of your projected annual U.S.-directed 
production volume. For example, if projected volume is 475 engines, test 
two engines in each of the first two quarters and one engine in the 
third quarter to fulfill your testing requirements under this section 
for that engine family. If your projected production volume is less than 
150, you must test at least two engines.
    (5) You choose to declare that the engine family does not comply 
with the requirements of this subpart.
    (h) If the sample-size calculation allows you to stop testing for a 
pollutant, you must continue measuring emission levels of that pollutant 
for any additional tests required under this section. However, you need 
not continue making the calculations specified in this section for that 
pollutant. This paragraph (h) does not affect the requirements in Sec.  
1048.320.
    (i) You may elect to test more randomly chosen engines than we 
require under this section. Include these engines in the sample-size 
calculations.

[67 FR 68347, Nov. 8, 2002, as amended at 70 FR 40475, July 13, 2005]