DOT pulled my Japanese import over today. Need some help (1 Viewer)

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So as long as the Province of BC assigns your truck a VIN, why would that be just 1 more step back from complying to all CMVSS ? The truck DOES have a 17 digit VIN at that time...
 
M John Galt said:
I respectfully disagree; those are not 'holes in the theory' but rather other factors to consider. Both RHD and LHD have advangages and disadvantages in a right lane world. Not everyone is adaptable to new ways of doing things if they've been driving LHD vehicles all their life. RHD isn't for everyone, but then neither is flying a small aircraft, riding a motorcycle, conning a sailboat, and a host of other things the general public never masters. "Specialization is for Insects" - Lazarus Long

Valid points. I accept that you respectively disagree. I meant no disrespect in my thoughts.

I just did not agree with the above mentioned theories. But again that is IMOP... :beer:
 
Fromage said:
Why, you worried about the man reading your thread? Hahaha

Jest don't want to be handing ammo to the Man, you know what I'm saying?

Fromage said:
JDM vehicles cannot be altered to comply with all Canadian standards so they can't be imported in this manner. Only way is over 15 years of age. Although the CMVSS aren't applicable federally to over 15 year of age vehicles, the provincial authorities may mandate compliance to federal standards through their provincial Acts.

I agree. Any provincial acts and regs that I've looked at require that vehicles conform to the MVSA, regardless of age. That is why parts of the MVSA and its TSDs are relevant to us even though our trucks are 15 years or older. So, practically speaking, there is no exemption. We still need to meet those requirements, and the provincial leg and regs are pretty specific about which sections of the MVSE are relevant. I haven't looked into whether things like crash safety, penetration, etc., are among these.

Fromage said:
Also, some of you might be interested to know that there is no federal requirement for DOT markings on lenses. However, because the manufacturer has not certified JDM vehicles to CDN standards, it would be impossible for an owner to demonstrate compliance for lights (you would have to get records of testing, or test them yourself via lab, ugh). So the best bet is just to look for DOT markings and if there are none change the lights out.

Let me get this straight: you don't need DOT markings, but if you don't have them, better change your lights out? I don't get it. It is true, though, that you don't need DOT markings, but you do need SAE markings, or, in the case of headlamps, a valid E-code and proof the lights were patterned for travel on the RH side of the road (TSD 108.1).

Since we've pretty much established that everyone's lights meet some kind of standard, the trick is to get ahold of the standard and the tests used to establish that standard and demonstrate to the Feds that those test are as stringent and complete (if not more so) as the SAE standards they currently use. It seems that most of these are available online, except that the ECE website is an absolute bastard to use, making them hard to find.
 
1. Cyclists coming up on the right is a major concern when making right turns in urban areas. In a LHD vehicle the only safe way to check for this is to look back over your right shoulder, thus loosing sight of what is happening in front. This method is actually specified in the commercial driver training manual. In a RHD you just drop your eyes to the right hand mirror for an instant and you can see everything to your right rear without losing sight of what is happening in front of your vehicle. You can also have blind spot mirrors to see whats happening with cyclists. No matter what side of the vehicle your on blind spots exist. If you mean you can fit extra mirrors to a LHD, sure you can fit extra mirrors to anything. 99.9% of the population does not however. Cyclists come up on the right, not the left. It's illegal, but they still do it.

2. When turning left (particulary) in a LHD vehicle the left side windshield pillar is much closer to your eyes and therefore blocks more of your field of view. In a RHD the pillar is farther away and therefore blocks much less of the FOV. That windshield pillar can easily obscure a pedestrian when turning left through an intersection for example. Come on! your sitting further away on the right, if you are facing a car in the opposite side who is alos turning you cannot see the oncoming lane with out nudging into it. Also what about you doing right turns, piller is there causing a blind spot on that turn. I don't understand the first part of your comment, but as for the second part, right turns are always less risky when driving on the right; you're not turning across oncoming lanes. I find I tend to go wider when turning right in a LHD. In a RHD I stay very tight. Funnily enough though, I don't notice any tendency to go wide when turning left.

3. At night it is much easier to see and follow the white line on the right side of the road than trying to see the yellow line in the center against the headlights of oncoming traffic. By avoiding looking directly at the oncoming headlights one's night vision is better preserved and one is more likely to see pedestrians, cyclists or other hazards on the curb side which are frequently not seen by drivers in LHD vehicles. your not supposed to stare at the ground directly infront of you for line reference. Instead you look further ahead. I cannot see how the minor little degrees of angle can be an asset. The more you raise your line of vision in a LHD the more you look into oncoming headlights obviously. That is why many driving instructors etc. suggest looking slightly down and to the right in a LHD vehicle. I wasn't aware of any advantage either until I tried RHD.

4. In a head-on collision the impact is most likely to occur on the left front side; being seated on the right one is less likely to be injured. no evidence of that. so much for the passenger eh? I'm sorry, that's a pointless comment. Most vehicles are single occupant most of the time. Evidence? It's in the wrecking yards.

5. When parallel parking visibility is much better. until you try to pull out and cannot see oncoming traffic or behind traffic cause your blocked in, so you have to nudge out blind. If your butt is 6" off the ground in a sports car maybe. Not in a 4x4 I can tell you. I've never had any difficulty -Toyotas come with excellent semi-convex mirrors. Where are you under more pressure: pulling out from a parking space or slowing down in traffic to make a right turn? You can take as long as you want to decide when to pull out of a parking space, unlike a rolling turn situation.

6. The driver gets out of the vehicle on the curb side rather than the road side. Obviously much safer for the driver as well as cyclists and other drivers. again what about the passengers? Ditto to 5. above

For most people, driving a RHD in NA is very easy and quickly becomes 'second nature'. In fact you begin to wonder why we drive on the left at all, given the advantages to RHD...a historical ‘accident’ no doubt. I do not doubt you can learn to be comfortable. and with precaustions safe. but there are limitations you have to accomadate for. Try it for a month, you might see what I mean. I notice the nay-sayers seem to have LHD vehicles.

This is not a pitch, these are my honest observations based on my own experience and common sense. Before I drove RHD I had no idea if I could/would like it. I asked everyone I saw driving RHD what their experience had been. They all said there was nothing to it; now I can see why.:cheers:
 
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Fromage said:
Why, you worried about the man reading your thread? Hahaha

Under the Motor Vehicle Safety Act, vehicles over 15 years of age are exempted from otherwise applicable Canada Motor Vehicle Safety Standards. Federally speaking once it's 15 years old it doesn't need anything. It falls out from under TC's regulations. Provincially it's another story.

Can you quote the part of the Motor Vehicle Safety Act that specifies this? I have not been able to find it. AFAIK (see earlier post of mine), the 15 year exemption applies ONLY at the point of entry.
 
Previa Diesel said:
This is not a pitch, these are my honest observations based on my own experience and common sense. Before I drove RHD I had no idea if I could/would like it. I asked everyone I saw driving RHD what their experience had been. They all said there was nothing to it; now I can see why.:cheers:


Hey you changed my comments to blue???


Thanks for the counterpoint.

My misclarification on the first comment was regarding you are sitting further over to the right in the vehicle(the rh seat) and thus have less vision to the left around cars at an intersection.

Time for tea...Thanks BB
 
brownbear said:
Hey you changed my comments to blue???

My misclarification on the first comment was regarding you are sitting further over to the right in the vehicle(the rh seat) and thus have less vision to the left around cars at an intersection.

Yeh, red's not my colour.

If I understand correctly you are referring to a scenario where you are waiting to turn left behind another vehicle and might be better able in a LHD to see the oncoming traffic around the left side of the vehicle(s) in front?

Left-turners are 100% liable in the event of an accident. Thus it seems smarter to wait until you are the lead vehicle in the left turn lane then decide when it is safe to turn. Personally I'm #^$%@# tired of people turning left on red lights or against oncoming traffic. RHD should help discourage that kind of behaviour. (a bit of enforcement would be nice too)

The inspector I spoke to referred to passing being more difficult in a RHD. As I pointed out passing is inherently risky and if you are so close behind the vehicle ahead that you cannot see if it is safe to pass you'd better stay where you are. So RHD probably makes people more cautious. That can only be a good thing.
 
yep, if you tailgate in either LHD or RHD you are at risk.
driving RHD is the same as LHD, there is a learning curve. if you are uncomfortable in either you shouldn't be driving it.
cheers
<3 years and counting for my wife and I in a RHD in a LHD country>

without documented proof that RHD are more dangerous it is all uneductated, unproven hear-say...
 
crushers said:
without documented proof that RHD are more dangerous it is all uneductated, unproven hear-say...

I just wounder if the postal workers who drive our citys and towns all day long may have some ducumantation on RHD saftey?

GB
 
crushers said:
without documented proof that RHD are more dangerous it is all uneductated, unproven hear-say...

It's not even hearsay - there is NO evidence, period. In fact the evidence is quite the opposite IMO: RHD is safer.

I just wonder if the postal workers who drive our cities and towns all day long may have some documentation on RHD safety?

I don't know, but some of them could sure use a good import. I was driving in Ladner a few weeks ago and one of them was driving up the right side of the road in the wrong direction so he could reach the mailboxes without getting out of his LHD car.:rolleyes:
 
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of he gets caught doing such a stunt the fine at the post office is steep and could lose his job for doing that...
 
Well, one of you importers ought to find out who these guys are and introduce them to the joys of RHD imports. Like most people they probably don't know the option exists.
 
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Previa Diesel said:
Yeh, red's not my colour.

If I understand correctly you are referring to a scenario where you are waiting to turn left behind another vehicle and might be better able in a LHD to see the oncoming traffic around the left side of the vehicle(s) in front?

Left-turners are 100% liable in the event of an accident. Thus it seems smarter to wait until you are the lead vehicle in the left turn lane then decide when it is safe to turn. Personally I'm #^$%@# tired of people turning left on red lights or against oncoming traffic. RHD should help discourage that kind of behaviour. (a bit of enforcement would be nice too) i am not just refering to being behind someone at an intersection turning left, but also say you are the lead vehicle(where it is ok turn on green, no actual grn arrow) and the oncoming lane also has this, you are facing each other. So my theory is as also being a passenger sitting on the rh side, you cannot always see the moving lane on the rh side of car you are facing. unless you are on the lh side of the car and nudging in a little(LHD). So being RHD it is even a little harder to see...That was my point I countered with earlier........now hows that for A confusing counter point. Note: I do not feel RHD is unsafe. Safety is orginated from who the driver is....

The inspector I spoke to referred to passing being more difficult in a RHD. As I pointed out passing is inherently risky and if you are so close behind the vehicle ahead that you cannot see if it is safe to pass you'd better stay where you are. So RHD probably makes people more cautious. That can only be a good thing.

See my comment above.....
 
i am not just refering to being behind someone at an intersection turning left, but also say you are the lead vehicle(where it is ok turn on green, no actual grn arrow) and the oncoming lane also has this, you are facing each other. So my theory is as also being a passenger sitting on the rh side, you cannot always see the moving lane on the rh side of car you are facing. unless you are on the lh side of the car and nudging in a little(LHD). So being RHD it is even a little harder to see...That was my point I countered with earlier........now hows that for A confusing counter point. Note: I do not feel RHD is unsafe. Safety is orginated from who the driver is....

You mean on a two or three lane road with a left turn lane in both directions? True, you can't see quite as much past the RH side of the facing (also turning) vehicle, (assuming you're not in a 4x4) which just means you have to wait until you can! If you're trying to turn left when there is a vehicle blocking some of your view of the oncoming through lanes you are asking for trouble whether you are RHD or LHD. So from what you are saying, RHD would make people less inclined to gamble when turning left on a multi-lane road. Good; anything (within reason) which makes people more cautious is to be welcomed by sensible drivers, the insurance industry and regulatory authorities.
 
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Since we've pretty much established that everyone's lights meet some kind of standard, the trick is to get ahold of the standard and the tests used to establish that standard and demonstrate to the Feds that those test are as stringent and complete (if not more so) as the SAE standards they currently use. It seems that most of these are available online, except that the ECE website is an absolute bastard to use, making them hard to find.

Heheh, you realise that major OEMs have been trying to do that for 30 years, right? ECE lights generally don't pass DOT. They aren't inferior, just different. Actually Canada accepts some ECE lights - see CMVSS 108.1 alternative headlights. However, there are some catches - LH traffic being one of them.

Why mess with the man? Get DOT lights. Province guy happy. End of story.
 
Fromage said:
LH traffic being one of them.

Most of Europe, with the exception of Great Britain, which it could be argued, is not part of Europe, is all left hand drive.
 
We've been trying to say that for a long time, we have more in common with North America than we have ever had with the rest of Europe.

I think it is right though it isn't really worth trying to buck the system, better just to fit DOT approved lights and be done with it.

Problem is (certainly over here) that while most sane people don't have an argument with the safety of imported cars, it is the manufacturers that really have a vested interest in not having grey imports on their turf. They spend a lot of money making region specific vehicles (and I'm not sure that this is all because the regulations need it - I'm sure the vehicle manufacturers have enough clout to get anything they want passed - apart from emissions) and the manufacturers want to protect their local dealers which doesn't sit well with having grey imports allowed.

A lot of Toyota dealers in the UK won't recognise grey imports, supply parts for them, honour recalls etc. They don't want them over here, they want to sell the local ones - remember the local dealers and also the manufacturer don't make any money on the sale of grey imports and at the price they go for they figure they could sell a local vehicle (maybe not the quality of the LC). For the money you can pay for a 10 year old import LC in the UK you could pretty much buy a small local Toyota from new which is obviously what Toyota want.

You won't beat the governments no matter how hard you try untill there are sufficient grey imports in the country to overcome the manufacturers reluctance to allow them and also become a significant minority.

In the UK we just take it on the chin, do what's asked and get on with it. Every now and then they try to make it a little more difficult (we now have two levels of SVA depending on age of vehicle) however overall it's amazing that you often have to remove items for the SVA which are allowed as accessories on no grey import vehicles such as

Bull Bars
Rear mounted spare wheels
Vent Visors
Side steps

anything that could be remotely classed as sharp (vent visors are classed as this).

It's a fight you aren't going to win - Sorry but that is the way the world works.

In the end it just ups the price of the imports which is another way of discouraging them. However that tack won't win either as long as JDM vehicles exist in better or different specifications to local market versions and as long as countries who don't normally have many diesels refuse to meet the needs of the consumer.

Rant over!!!
 
jcolvin said:
Can you quote the part of the Motor Vehicle Safety Act that specifies this? I have not been able to find it. AFAIK (see earlier post of mine), the 15 year exemption applies ONLY at the point of entry.

It's actually under the Regs.

Section 4(2) of the MVSR:

http://www.tc.gc.ca/acts-regulations/GENERAL/m/mvsa/regulations/mvsrg/001/mvsr3-5.html

"(2) The prescribed classes referred to in subsections (1) and (1.1) do not include a vehicle that was manufactured 15 years or more before the date of its importation into Canada, except for a bus. "
 
Safety of a RHD

I've been driving RHD's since August 2001.... quite early in the whole RHD craze. I got the second vehicle that Lost Guide brought into Canada. I would have bought the first, but was late by 30 minutes. So, I think I have some experience on RHD use....

There are two things that RHD's really are bad at...

1. Passing on a 2 lane highway. If it's straight and flat, and you're behind a big square boxy truck, you just can't see. You either sit behind slow poke, wait for a bend in the road which enables you to see past the slow vehicle, or, if you have a passenger who's judgement you REALLY trust, they can advise you on the passability of the oncoming traffic. The only remaining option is to pull WAY out into the oncoming traffic lane to see around him.

2. Left hand turns on a solid green, when there's someone also in the opposing LH turn lane. You can't see around the guy across from you to see if there's traffic coming. You sit there. People in LHD's that can see around you honk like you're an idiot. You feel like an idiot.

There are some things that RHD's definately do better.

1. Visibility. The convex lenses of the RHD vehicles are incredibly superior to the N.A. flat mirror counterparts. I can see around me and in all blind spots WAY better than anything else. I've subsequently changed out all my mirrors on my NA spec vehicles to have convex mirrors.
2. Parallel Parking. Indeed, WAY better than in a LHD.
3. Curb appeal... Indeed, it's also way nicer to enter and exit from the curb side. No sitting and watching the mirror to know when you can open the door to get out. No watching the traffic before you dart out to run in the driving lane to get to your door. Very much nicer. With the life insurance money, passengers can be replaced... often with younger and better looking models.

I must also say that I do agree with the comment about LH turns in LH vehciles. I have a new 2003 Dodge pick-up, and the slopey front windshield and beefy A pillar make for a very effective screen to any visibility on LH turns. I have to move my head entirely around the pillar (and subsequently loose visibility in all the mirrors and sometimes directly ahead of me) to make a LH turn, and have, in fact, had to test the ABS in the rig on a few occassions where I couldn't see a biped until I was pointing right at them. Hence, I've become more cautious in this 'safer' LHD vehicle.

I would also suggest that the night time-oncoming traffic-watch the white line really is better in the RHD, although only a bit. There's still a moment of blindess as two vehciles pass in the night, but it's a bit less intesne in the RHD vehicles I've driven.

But all that is anecdotal heresay. Let's get the facts and the stats.

Peter Straub
 

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