plumber mike
Adventurer
If you have a loan, then it’s not your truck.
Ok. I was just mentioning that it was a possibility, and folks are already doing it. I’m not sure I’d consider it if I had a loan against one of my trucks either. It’s certainly not fraud to put new parts on an old truck.
I’ve always understood that getting a Diesel engine “EGR Delete Tune” done to your rig in places like Arizona, where we have annual vehicle emissions testing and inspections, is “problematic”...but I hadn’t read that the EPA was actually now going after diesel repairs shops for doing this wok.
But today, I stumbled across this interesting post on the Colorado Diesel Forum, indicating that that’s what’s now happening. Have any of you read/seen/heard anything about this?
It really makes me wonder if next they’ll start subpoenaing work records from these shops and then start going after and penalizing truck owners who’ve had this delete work done on their rigs!
(Post follows)
EPA Crackdown in Delete Tuning
Discussion in 'Colorado Diesel Tuning' started Sep 18, 2019.
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Burgess159Active Member
Just in case you had not heard, American Diesel Performance is no longer doing emissions delete tuning, unfortunately. Here’s their post from Facebook:
The long term objective is to eliminate internal combustion engines. Put all your questions in that context and things will become clear.
As long as the need for ICEs is eliminated (more likely, greatly reduced), that's fine by me.The long term objective is to eliminate internal combustion engines. Put all your questions in that context and things will become clear.
Well, it is the law. If people don't like it, they should try to change it, not sidestep enforcement because of how it may impact them.This is 100% about control. People are breaking the law and the EPA doesn’t like that they had no control over it. This is their way of controlling it. Nothing more.
This has nothing to do with electric cars. Other things might, but this doesn’t.
Well, it is the law. If people don't like it, they should try to change it, not sidestep enforcement because of how it may impact them.
Well, it is the law. If people don't like it, they should try to change it, not sidestep enforcement because of how it may impact them.
Is that likely to change the law, or bring a vehicle into compliance?Translation: Bend over and spread 'em.
So really no different than an off road only tune, or no mud flaps where required. Illegal is illegal. How you justify it is up to you. I’m not saying do it. I’m just saying it is being done. I don’t want a 2020 truck. If I did I would buy one. But a newer cab with the double door seals....and nice seats...and big disk brakes.....and...There’s no way to put 2020 parts on an old truck in any way that actually is a benefit. You’d be VIN swapping. Which is fraud.
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It's always possible that an aftermarket tuner will gain EPA approval. With enough on-board monitoring and intelligence, maybe a company will develop an add-on system that can stay within the emission bounds and still deliver better performance for a specific engine, as opposed to the more generic tuning OEMs need do for large numbers of vehicles.My last Diesel engine was stock and this one will be too. I get it.
This has everything to do with it. Might as well load the guns in the diesel truck and surrender them all at the same time.This is 100% about control. People are breaking the law and the EPA doesn’t like that they had no control over it. This is their way of controlling it. Nothing more.
This has nothing to do with electric cars. Other things might, but this doesn’t.
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Is that likely to change the law, or bring a vehicle into compliance?