Moving to Oregon
#1
Moving to Oregon
Hey guys,
New to this forum but I have somewhat of a predicament. So I have a supercharged S2000 and so there is no way I will be able to pass emissions testing for the state. I should also clarify that I am moving to the Portland area. The only real solution I can really think of is keeping my registration through Montana "where I live now) because there is no emissions. Also I can just renew my tags online and have them mailed to me. Other than that I'm not really sure what else I can do because going back to stock would take so long and a lot more effort than it's worth.
Please let me know if you think there is a better way or if this could work (Its just a theory). Thanks for the advice and future help.
please let me know if you think this will work
New to this forum but I have somewhat of a predicament. So I have a supercharged S2000 and so there is no way I will be able to pass emissions testing for the state. I should also clarify that I am moving to the Portland area. The only real solution I can really think of is keeping my registration through Montana "where I live now) because there is no emissions. Also I can just renew my tags online and have them mailed to me. Other than that I'm not really sure what else I can do because going back to stock would take so long and a lot more effort than it's worth.
Please let me know if you think there is a better way or if this could work (Its just a theory). Thanks for the advice and future help.
please let me know if you think this will work
#2
My car (in Washington) is not SC but I do run a Mugen competition ECU that will not pass testing along with various other minor changes. For every smog test I swap back to the OEM ECU and change anything that creates a check engine light to pass. This is a pain (takes me an hour normally) but just a hoop to jump through. All any of these tests do is poll the ECU for recent check engine alerts... there is no actual exhaust testing in most cases (only on some failures and retests).
#3
My car (in Washington) is not SC but I do run a Mugen competition ECU that will not pass testing along with various other minor changes. For every smog test I swap back to the OEM ECU and change anything that creates a check engine light to pass. This is a pain (takes me an hour normally) but just a hoop to jump through. All any of these tests do is poll the ECU for recent check engine alerts... there is no actual exhaust testing in most cases (only on some failures and retests).
#4
My Mugen ECU does not allow any programming and even though it reports 'passed' to DOT computers it also reports 'inop' regarding emission systems. It was ok up until states got new software about 2007 and now fails everywhere. I have to reinstall my OEM ECU and have no CELs to pass.
I don't know how your ECU will be treated by the latest DOT software but if it reports as a stock ECU and no CELs it may be OK. The risk is that if it fails the re-test may involve using the exhaust sensors and you will fail from then on for sure.
I don't know how your ECU will be treated by the latest DOT software but if it reports as a stock ECU and no CELs it may be OK. The risk is that if it fails the re-test may involve using the exhaust sensors and you will fail from then on for sure.
#5
My Mugen ECU does not allow any programming and even though it reports 'passed' to DOT computers it also reports 'inop' regarding emission systems. It was ok up until states got new software about 2007 and now fails everywhere. I have to reinstall my OEM ECU and have no CELs to pass.
I don't know how your ECU will be treated by the latest DOT software but if it reports as a stock ECU and no CELs it may be OK. The risk is that if it fails the re-test may involve using the exhaust sensors and you will fail from then on for sure.
I don't know how your ECU will be treated by the latest DOT software but if it reports as a stock ECU and no CELs it may be OK. The risk is that if it fails the re-test may involve using the exhaust sensors and you will fail from then on for sure.
#6
Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: Portland/Hillsboro, OR
Posts: 750
Likes: 0
Received 2 Likes
on
2 Posts
All they do is plug into your OBD II to make sure you do not have any check engine lights and that's it. No sniffer test, no visual test etc. Are you on a full standalone, piggy back etc? Prior to getting SP plates i was able to pass emissions with flash pro and a test pipe.
Trending Topics
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
hazmat
Arizona S2000 Owners
5
07-13-2010 05:36 PM