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Also, rather than just basing everything on relative concentration, the standards should also take into account overall output. Thus, a Diesel Hummer wouldn't be favored over a Diesel Smart Car due to emission concentration while the Smart puts out only a fraction of the total emissions of the Hummer.
As far as maintenance on aging vehicles. It can become astronomically expensive to repair the emission system on a 20+ yr old car that only gets driven a few thousand miles a year. St. Louis has exempt all pre-ODB II vehicles which is a step forward. But, the 20+ yr old vehicles are the minority of the vehicles on the road, and they usually get driven less than the newer vehicles.
...Please explain.Steve
The efficiency of the engine tallies quite well with the ppm of pollutants in the exhaust.*Since they are seeking to improve efficiency that's what they measure.The fact is that mopeds and 4by4s simply aren't the same thing. You cannot directly compare miles per gallon for the two.Don't forget that the gas guzzlers already pay more tax because they use more fuel (which is heavily taxed).* an ideal, lean-burn engine would produce about 140000 ppm CO2, 0 ppm NOx, 0ppm CO, 0ppm hydrocarbons and zero ppm SOx no matter whether it was diesel or gasoline and whatever the engine capacity.
Currently the US & others still have very lenient taxation for 'gas'
This is going a bit 'off topic', don't ya think guys?