[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: 40CFR1068.501]

[Page 850-853]
 
                   TITLE 40--PROTECTION OF ENVIRONMENT
 
         CHAPTER I--ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY (CONTINUED)
 
PART 1068_GENERAL COMPLIANCE PROVISIONS FOR 
NONROAD PROGRAMS--Table of Contents
 
            Subpart F_Reporting Defects and Recalling Engines
 
Sec.  1068.501  How do I report engine defects?


    This section addresses your responsibility to investigate and report 
emission-related defects in design, materials, or workmanship. The 
provisions of this section do not limit your liability under this part 
or the Clean Air Act. For example, selling an engine that does not 
conform to your application for certification is a violation of Sec.  
1068.101(a)(1), independent of the requirements of this section.
    (a) General provisions. As an engine manufacturer, you must 
investigate in certain circumstances whether engines that have been 
introduced into commerce in the United States have incorrect, improperly 
installed, or otherwise defective emission-related components or 
systems. You must also send us reports as specified by this section.
    (1) This section addresses defects for any of the following 
emission-related components, or systems containing the following 
components:
    (i) Electronic control units, aftertreatment devices, fuel-metering 
components, EGR-system components, crankcase-ventilation valves, all 
components related to charge-air compression and cooling, and all 
sensors associated with any of these components.
    (ii) Any other component whose primary purpose is to reduce 
emissions.
    (iii) Any other component whose failure might increase emissions of 
any pollutant without significantly degrading engine performance.
    (2) The requirements of this section relate to defects in any of the 
components or systems identified in paragraph (a)(1) of this section if 
the defects might affect any of the parameters or specifications in 
Appendix II of this part or might otherwise affect an engine's emissions 
of any pollutant.
    (3) For the purposes of this section, defects do not include damage 
to emission-related components or systems (or maladjustment of 
parameters) caused by owners improperly maintaining or abusing their 
engines.
    (4) The requirements of this section do not apply to emission 
control information labels. Note however, that Sec.  1068.101(a)(1) 
prohibits the sale of engines without proper labels, which also applies 
to misprinted labels.
    (5) You must track the information specified in paragraph (b)(1) of 
this section. You must assess this data at least every three months to 
evaluate whether you exceed the thresholds specified in paragraphs (e) 
and (f) of this section. Where thresholds are based on a percentage of 
engines in the engine family, use actual sales figures for the whole 
model year when they become available. Use projected sales figures until 
the actual sales figures become available. You are not required to 
collect additional information other than that specified in paragraph 
(b)(1) of this section before reaching a threshold for an investigation 
specified in paragraph (e) of this section.
    (6) You may ask us to allow you to use alternate methods for 
tracking, investigating, reporting, and correcting emission-related 
defects. In your request, explain and demonstrate why you believe your 
alternate system will be at least as effective in the aggregate in 
tracking, identifying, investigating, evaluating, reporting, and 
correcting potential and actual emissions-related defects as the 
requirements in this section. In this case, provide all available data 
necessary to demonstrate why an alternate system is appropriate for your 
engines and how it will result in a system at least as effective as that 
required under this section.
    (7) If we determine that emission-related defects result in a 
substantial number of properly maintained and used engines not 
conforming to the regulations of this chapter during their useful life, 
we may order you to conduct a recall of your engines (see Sec.  
1068.505).
    (8) Send all reports required by this section to the Designated 
Officer.
    (9) This section distinguishes between defects and possible defects. 
A possible defect exists anytime there is an indication that an 
emission-related component or system might have a defect, as described 
in paragraph (b)(1) of this section.
    (b) Investigation of possible defects. Investigate possible defects 
as follows:
    (1) If the number of engines that have a possible defect, as defined 
by this

[[Page 851]]

paragraph (b)(1), exceeds a threshold specified in paragraph (e) of this 
section, you must conduct an investigation to determine if an emission-
related component or system is actually defective. You must classify an 
engine component or system as having a possible defect if any of the 
following sources of information shows there is a significant 
possibility that a defect exists:
    (i) A warranty claim is submitted for the component, whether this is 
under your emission-related warranty or any other warranty.
    (ii) Your quality-assurance procedures suggest that a defect may 
exist.
    (iii) You receive any other information for which good engineering 
judgment would indicate the component or system may be defective, such 
as information from dealers, field-service personnel, hotline 
complaints, or engine diagnostic systems.
    (2) If the number of shipped replacement parts for any individual 
component is high enough that good engineering judgment would indicate a 
significant possibility that a defect exists, you must conduct an 
investigation to determine if it is actually defective. Note that this 
paragraph (b)(2) does not require data-tracking or recording provisions 
related to shipment of replacement parts.
    (3) Your investigation must be prompt, thorough, consider all 
relevant information, follow accepted scientific and engineering 
principles, and be designed to obtain all the information specified in 
paragraph (d) of this section.
    (4) Your investigation needs to consider possible defects that occur 
only within the useful life period, or within five years after the end 
of the model year, whichever is longer.
    (5) You must continue your investigation until you are able to show 
that there is no emission-related defect or you obtain all the 
information specified for a defect report in paragraph (d) of this 
section. Send us an updated defect report anytime you have significant 
additional information.
    (6) If a component with a possible defect is used in additional 
engine families or model years, you must investigate whether the 
component may be defective when used in these additional engine families 
or model years, and include these results in any defect report you send 
under paragraph (c) of this section.
    (7) If your initial investigation concludes that the number of 
engines with a defect is fewer than any of the thresholds specified in 
paragraph (f) of this section, but other information later becomes 
available that may show that the number of engines with a defect exceeds 
a threshold, then you must resume your investigation. If you resume an 
investigation, you must include the information from the earlier 
investigation to determine whether to send a defect report.
    (c) Reporting defects. You must send us a defect report in either of 
the following cases:
    (1) Your investigation shows that the number of engines with a 
defect exceeds a threshold specified in paragraph (f) of this section. 
Send the defect report within 21 days after the date you identify this 
number of defective engines. See paragraph (h) of this section for 
reporting requirements that apply if the number of engines with a defect 
does not exceed any of the thresholds in paragraph (f) of this section.
    (2) You know there are emission-related defects for a component or 
system in a number of engines that exceeds a threshold specified in 
paragraph (f) of this section, regardless of how you obtain this 
information. Send the defect report within 21 days after you learn that 
the number of defects exceeds a threshold.
    (d) Contents of a defect report. Include the following information 
in a defect report:
    (1) Your corporate name and a person to contact regarding this 
defect.
    (2) A description of the defect, including a summary of any 
engineering analyses and associated data, if available.
    (3) A description of the engines that have the defect, including 
engine families, models, and range of production dates.
    (4) An estimate of the number and percentage of each class or 
category of affected engines that have the defect,

[[Page 852]]

and an explanation of how you determined this number. Describe any 
statistical methods you used under paragraph (g)(6) of this section.
    (5) An estimate of the defect's impact on emissions, with an 
explanation of how you calculated this estimate and a summary of any 
emission data demonstrating the impact of the defect, if available.
    (6) A description of your plan for addressing the defect or an 
explanation of your reasons for not believing the defects must be 
addressed.
    (e) Thresholds for conducting a defect investigation. You must begin 
a defect investigation based on the following number of engines that may 
have the defect:
    (1) For engines with maximum engine power at or below 560 kW:
    (i) For engine families with annual sales below 500 units: 50 or 
more engines.
    (ii) For engine families with annual sales from 500 to 50,000 units: 
more than 10.0 percent of the total number of engines in the engine 
family.
    (iii) For engine families with annual sales above 50,000 units: 
5,000 or more engines.
    (2) For engines with maximum engine power greater than 560 kW:
    (i) For engine families with annual sales below 250 units: 25 or 
more engines.
    (ii) For engine families with annual sales at or above 250 units: 
more than 10.0 percent of the total number of engines in the engine 
family.
    (f) Thresholds for filing a defect report. You must send a defect 
report based on the following number of engines that have the defect:
    (1) For engines with maximum engine power at or below 560 kW:
    (i) For engine families with annual sales below 1,000 units: 20 or 
more engines.
    (ii) For engine families with annual sales from 1,000 to 50,000 
units: more than 2.0 percent of the total number of engines in the 
engine family.
    (iii) For engine families with annual sales above 50,000 units: 
1,000 or more engines.
    (2) For engines with maximum engine power greater than 560 kW:
    (i) For engine families with annual sales below 150 units: 10 or 
more engines.
    (ii) For engine families with annual sales from 150 to 750 units: 15 
or more engines.
    (iii) For engine families with annual sales above 750 units: more 
than 2.0 percent of the total number of engines in the engine family.
    (g) How to count defects. (1) Track defects separately for each 
model year and engine family as much as possible. If information is not 
identifiable by model year or engine family, use good engineering 
judgment to evaluate whether you exceed a threshold in paragraph (e) or 
(f) of this section. Consider only your U.S.-directed production volume.
    (2) Within an engine family, track defects together for all 
components or systems that are the same in all material respects. If 
multiple companies separately supply a particular component or system, 
treat each company's component or system as unique.
    (3) If a possible defect is not attributed to any specific part of 
the engine, consider the complete engine a distinct component for 
evaluating whether you exceed a threshold in paragraph (e) of this 
section.
    (4) If you correct defects before they reach the ultimate purchaser 
as a result of your quality-assurance procedures, count these against 
the investigation thresholds in paragraph (e) of this section unless you 
routinely check every engine in the engine family. Do not count any 
corrected defects as actual defects under paragraph (f) of this section.
    (5) Use aggregated data from all the different sources identified in 
paragraph (b)(1) of this section to determine whether you exceed a 
threshold in paragraphs (e) and (f) of this section.
    (6) If information is readily available to conclude that the 
possible defects identified in paragraph (b)(1) of this section are 
actual defects, count these toward the reporting thresholds in paragraph 
(f) of this section.
    (7) During an investigation, use appropriate statistical methods to 
project defect rates for engines that you are not otherwise able to 
evaluate.

[[Page 853]]

For example, if 75 percent of the components replaced under warranty are 
available for evaluation, it would be appropriate to extrapolate known 
information on failure rates to the components that are unavailable for 
evaluation. Take steps as necessary to prevent bias in sampled data. 
Make adjusted calculations to take into account any bias that may 
remain.
    (h) Investigation reports. Once you trigger an investigation 
threshold under paragraph (e) of this section, you must report your 
progress and conclusions. In your reports, include the information 
specified in paragraph (d) of this section, or explain why the 
information is not relevant. Send us the following reports:
    (1) While you are investigating, send us mid-year and end-of-year 
reports to describe the methods you are using and the status of the 
investigation. Send these status reports no later than June 30 and 
December 31 of each year.
    (2) If you find that the number of components or systems with an 
emission-related defect exceeds a threshold specified in paragraph (f) 
of this section, send us a report describing your findings within 21 
days after the date you reach this conclusion.
    (3) If you find that the number of components or systems with an 
emission-related defect does not exceed any of the thresholds specified 
in paragraph (f) of this section, send us a final report supporting this 
conclusion. For example, you may exclude warranty claims that resulted 
from misdiagnosis and you may exclude defects caused by improper 
maintenance, improper use, or misfueling. Send this report within 21 
days after the date you reach this conclusion.
    (i) Future production. If you identify a design or manufacturing 
defect that prevents engines from meeting the requirements of this part, 
you must correct the defect as soon as possible for future production of 
engines in every family affected by the defect. This applies without 
regard to whether you are required to conduct a defect investigation or 
submit a defect report under this section.

[69 FR 39270, June 29, 2004]