Understanding Low-Emission Vehicles Jonesboro GA

An LEV produces fewer emissions than the average vehicle on the road. This would have been a simple explanation just five years ago, but increased regulations and new powerplant technologies have led to the creation of several new categories of low-emission vehicles that have increasingly stringent standards.

Local Companies

Advance Auto Parts
404-766-7709
6100 Old National Hwy
Atlanta, GA
Oreilly Auto Parts
404-753-6956
1175 Ralph David Abernathy Blvd SW
Atlanta, GA
Advance Auto Parts
404-521-2171
946 Martin Luther King Jr DR SW
Atlanta, GA
White Brothers Auto Parts
404-688-7278
900 Dekalb Ave NE
Atlanta, GA
O'Reilly Auto Parts
404-298-1293
3509 Covington Highway
Decatur, GA
O'Reilly Auto Parts
404-636-1408
2260 Lawrenceville Highway
Decatur, GA
Auto Disassembly Volvo
404-351-7730
930 Chattahoochee Ave, NW
Atlanta, GA
Advance Auto Parts
404-792-4105
2025 Donald Lee Hollowell Pkwy NW
Atlanta, GA
Alpha Used Auto Parts Inc
404-897-3444
1037 Donald Lee Hollowell Pkwy NW
Atlanta, GA
D&H Auto Service
404-352-9932
1492 Howell Mill RD NW
Atlanta, GA

Whether diesel- or gasoline-powered, all combustion engines expel noxious gasses such as unburned hydrocarbons and particulates into the air: the by-products of burned fuel that are discharged from the exhaust pipe into the atmosphere.

In the 1960s, government regulations were instituted to control automotive emissions and reduce the levels of pollution in the atmosphere. Over the years, engineering developments such as the three-way catalytic converter and computer-controlled

electronic fuel injection have reduced automotive emissions today to less than five percent of what they were 40 years ago. Even now, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA, www.epa.gov) continues to tighten air quality standards as technology improves. By 2009, all passenger vehicles will conform to standards that allow for less than one percent of the tailpipe emissions that were allowed in the 1960s. The EPA's newest standards are called Tier 2. California has separate emission standards for cars and trucks, known as LEV-II. For 2008, seven other states have adopted the California emissions standards: New York, Maine, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Connecticut and Vermont. States that border these states may also sell California-certified vehicles.

Visit almost any new-vehicle showroom and you may hear quite a bit about so-called low-emission vehicles (LEVs). An LEV produces fewer emissions than the average vehicle on the road. This would have been a simple explanation just five years ago, but increased regulations and new powerplant technologies have led to the creation of several new categories of low-emission vehicles that have increasingly stringent standards. California, long the nationwide leader in toughening emission standards, created the CAL LEV (California Low-Emission Vehicle) program and established specific standards. As more states followed California's lead, the following definitions have gradually become accepted across the nation:...

Click here to read the rest of the article at JDPower.com

Featured Local Company

Advance Auto Parts

404-766-7709
6100 Old National Hwy
Atlanta, GA


Rss   Delicious   Digg   Add To My Yahoo   Add To My Google   Bookmark   Search Plugin

Topics:
Advertising Family Home Services Real Estate Resources
Business Services Fashion Industrial Goods & Services Retail & Consumer Services
Career Financial Services Insurance Software
Cars Food & Beverage Internet Technology
Computer Hardware Franchise Legal Telecommunications
Construction Health Miscellaneous Trade Shows
Education Holidays Nightlife Travel
Entertainment Home Appliances Online Database Weddings
Environmental Home Electronics Pets World History