Equipmentcategory orsubcategory | Fuel linepermeation | Tank permeation | Diurnalemissions | Running loss emissions |
---|---|---|---|---|
Marine SI—portable marine fuel tanks | January 1, 2009 b | January 1, 2011 | January 1, 2010 | Not applicable. |
Marine SI—personal watercraft | January 1, 2009 | Model year 2011 | Model year 2010 | Not applicable. |
Marine SI—other vessels with installed fuel tanks | January 1, 2009 b | Model year 2012 | July 31, 2011 | Not applicable. |
Large SI | Model year 2007 | Not applicable | Model year 2007 (includes tank permeation) | Model year 2007. |
Recreational vehicles | Model year 2008 | Model year 2008 | Not applicable | Not applicable. |
Small SI—handheld | Model year 2012 c | Model year 2010 d | Not applicable | Not applicable. |
Small SI—Class I nonhandheld | January 1, 2009 | Model year 2012 | Not applicable e | Model year 2012. |
Small SI—Class II nonhandheld | January 1, 2009 | Model year 2011 | Not applicable e | Model year 2011. |
Code of Federal Regulations
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a Implementation is based on the date of manufacture of the equipment. Where we do not identify a specific date, the emission standards start to apply at the beginning of the model year. | ||||
b January 1, 2011 for primer bulbs. Standards phase in for under-cowl fuel lines on outboard engines, by length: 30% in 2010, 60% in 2011, 90% in 2012-2014, 100% in 2015. | ||||
c 2013 for small-volume emission families that do not include cold-weather fuel lines. | ||||
d 2011 for structurally integrated nylon fuel tanks and 2013 for all small-volume emission families. | ||||
e Manufacturers may optionally meet diurnal standards as specified in § 1060.105(e) . |