G-Man
Well-Known Member
Welcome to CA, now bend over
Here is the latest drama concerning my attempts to register my 81 528i here in CA.
http://s6.photobucket.com/albums/y208/bimmerfan02/Gordon E12/
This weekend, I received a letter from the CA DMV regarding registration of my 81 Euro Spec E12 528i.
In the DMV letter, it stated that:
Before registration can be completed, the following items are (is required).
-Certificate of Conformance issued by a laboratory authorized by the CA Air Resources Board (CARB)
-Copy of the documentation showing the modification costs
-Additional fees will be due for license fees based on the modification costs
They told me that my car is a direct import vehicle and since it wasn't registered in CA prior to May 31 1988, is why I need a letter of Certificate of Compliance.
As you may be aware, I bought the Euro spec 528i in Washington state in NOV and brought it back to CA. I went to DMV office in SLO to ask them what I needed to do to register the car. They told me since it's a gray market car, it has to go to the Referee for an inspection and to pass his smog test. I had a new cat, O2 sensor installed, major tune up and took it to the Referee right before XMAS. The referee gave my 528i a very detailed visual inspection to ensure the 528i was in compliance. After the very thorough visual test, it went through the smog test at the referee station and passed in flying colors and the 528i was issued a smog certificate. Since it's a gray market car, the paperwork to transfer the title went to Sacramento. Then this weekend I received the letter from DMV.
Yesterday, I called up DMV and they told me to contact CARB about the certificate of conformance. DMV said they can't do anything regarding registration of my 528i until CARB issues a certificate of conformance. I called up CARB and they told me the car has to go to an independent lab to have them do a test and if I pass, they will issue me a certificate of conformance. I was also informed that this test is very expensive ($2-3K). I explained to CARB that the car recently passed the smog test in DEC at the referee station and was issued a smog certificate and a CA BAR sticker was put on the door frame of the car. I also informed CARB that the car was originally in CA in the early 80's. CARB said once it left CA, it's essentially starting over. I was also told that the car should have never gone to a referee station, DMV gave me wrong info, I should have been directed to go to the testing lab first. The smog referee told me the car was grandfathered into the system since it was originally in CA in the 80's and 90's (it was in the data base that the referee accessed).
They (CARB) didn't want to hear my arguments. They told me that they have the rules in place to dissuade people from bringing in gray market cars to CA. I may have to go back to DMV to request all of my paperwork (they took my WA state title when I submitted my paperwork and smog certificate to the DMV on this car in order to get a CA title) so that I can sell the car out of state if I can't get this issue resolved soon.
Have anyone ever heard of such BS? I did what DMV told me to do and now I may be screwed. Any ideas on how to respond to the DMV or CARB? I'm looking for anyone who's been there, done that in regards to thier experiences in bringing a gray market car into CA from out of state. My E12 has been federalized (both DOT and EPA) but I don't have any DOT/EPA paperwork. The car has been through multiple owners over the past 28 years, so where the paperwork went to, who knows. DOT is not an issue since the car is over 25 years old.
Last week I went to DMV and transferred title on the 85 Euro spec E28 525e that I bought recently in Santa Barbara with no problems. The only difference, the E28 never been registered anywhere but CA (original CA blue plate E28). It was imported into CA at the height of the gray market era in 85 and has been in CA since then. Talk about catch 22.
Now here's an update on my saga.
Here's what the CA CARB Direct Import (grey market) office told me yesterday when I asked some questions.
I won't be giving the lab any money to test my car but I've got lots of out of state buyers who are very interested in it. I tried, it sucks but chalk it up as a lesson learned if you live in CA. CARB doesn't believe American's are a mobile society, they do move occasionally from state to state. They want me to put my 28 year old car through the same the lab tests that a new car has to go through for accreditation to be sold in CA, sorry, my pockets aren't that deep.
I was verbally directed by the DMV clerk in the DMV SLO office to go to the referee, I have nothing in writing telling me that.
Gordon
-----Original Message-----
From: Longhi, Veronica@ARB [mailto:vlonghi@arb.ca.gov]
Sent: Wednesday, February 18, 2009 3:23 PM
To: Parr, Gordon D
Subject: RE: Vehicle Certificate of Conformance
Hi Gordon,
The "grandfather" policy is for grey market vehicles registered in
California prior to the effective date of the California regulation,
June 1 1988. Vehicles registered after that date are required to meet
our lab test requirements. Unfortunately, if the registration is not
continuous (for example, the vehicle leaves the state and comes back at
a later date) the DMV will treat it like a new registration, and
therefore will require a Certificate of Conformance. If you have any
proof and can document the DMV giving you wrong information, then there may be a possibility that ARB can help, depending on the circumstance. Since any letters we write to the DMV regarding grey market vehicles needs to go out through our Public Information Office, please contact them directly for further assistance. They can be reached at 1-800-242-4450, or you can e-mail John Swanton at jswanton@arb.ca.gov.
Thanks,
-Veronica-
_________________
G-Man
85 525e (Euro spec)
81 528iA (Euro spec)
74 2002tii (many mods)
70 E3 2800 (Euro spec) 108K original KM's
3 E30's and a 96 4Runner parts hauler
Here is the latest drama concerning my attempts to register my 81 528i here in CA.
http://s6.photobucket.com/albums/y208/bimmerfan02/Gordon E12/
This weekend, I received a letter from the CA DMV regarding registration of my 81 Euro Spec E12 528i.
In the DMV letter, it stated that:
Before registration can be completed, the following items are (is required).
-Certificate of Conformance issued by a laboratory authorized by the CA Air Resources Board (CARB)
-Copy of the documentation showing the modification costs
-Additional fees will be due for license fees based on the modification costs
They told me that my car is a direct import vehicle and since it wasn't registered in CA prior to May 31 1988, is why I need a letter of Certificate of Compliance.
As you may be aware, I bought the Euro spec 528i in Washington state in NOV and brought it back to CA. I went to DMV office in SLO to ask them what I needed to do to register the car. They told me since it's a gray market car, it has to go to the Referee for an inspection and to pass his smog test. I had a new cat, O2 sensor installed, major tune up and took it to the Referee right before XMAS. The referee gave my 528i a very detailed visual inspection to ensure the 528i was in compliance. After the very thorough visual test, it went through the smog test at the referee station and passed in flying colors and the 528i was issued a smog certificate. Since it's a gray market car, the paperwork to transfer the title went to Sacramento. Then this weekend I received the letter from DMV.
Yesterday, I called up DMV and they told me to contact CARB about the certificate of conformance. DMV said they can't do anything regarding registration of my 528i until CARB issues a certificate of conformance. I called up CARB and they told me the car has to go to an independent lab to have them do a test and if I pass, they will issue me a certificate of conformance. I was also informed that this test is very expensive ($2-3K). I explained to CARB that the car recently passed the smog test in DEC at the referee station and was issued a smog certificate and a CA BAR sticker was put on the door frame of the car. I also informed CARB that the car was originally in CA in the early 80's. CARB said once it left CA, it's essentially starting over. I was also told that the car should have never gone to a referee station, DMV gave me wrong info, I should have been directed to go to the testing lab first. The smog referee told me the car was grandfathered into the system since it was originally in CA in the 80's and 90's (it was in the data base that the referee accessed).
They (CARB) didn't want to hear my arguments. They told me that they have the rules in place to dissuade people from bringing in gray market cars to CA. I may have to go back to DMV to request all of my paperwork (they took my WA state title when I submitted my paperwork and smog certificate to the DMV on this car in order to get a CA title) so that I can sell the car out of state if I can't get this issue resolved soon.
Have anyone ever heard of such BS? I did what DMV told me to do and now I may be screwed. Any ideas on how to respond to the DMV or CARB? I'm looking for anyone who's been there, done that in regards to thier experiences in bringing a gray market car into CA from out of state. My E12 has been federalized (both DOT and EPA) but I don't have any DOT/EPA paperwork. The car has been through multiple owners over the past 28 years, so where the paperwork went to, who knows. DOT is not an issue since the car is over 25 years old.
Last week I went to DMV and transferred title on the 85 Euro spec E28 525e that I bought recently in Santa Barbara with no problems. The only difference, the E28 never been registered anywhere but CA (original CA blue plate E28). It was imported into CA at the height of the gray market era in 85 and has been in CA since then. Talk about catch 22.
Now here's an update on my saga.
Here's what the CA CARB Direct Import (grey market) office told me yesterday when I asked some questions.
I won't be giving the lab any money to test my car but I've got lots of out of state buyers who are very interested in it. I tried, it sucks but chalk it up as a lesson learned if you live in CA. CARB doesn't believe American's are a mobile society, they do move occasionally from state to state. They want me to put my 28 year old car through the same the lab tests that a new car has to go through for accreditation to be sold in CA, sorry, my pockets aren't that deep.
I was verbally directed by the DMV clerk in the DMV SLO office to go to the referee, I have nothing in writing telling me that.
Gordon
-----Original Message-----
From: Longhi, Veronica@ARB [mailto:vlonghi@arb.ca.gov]
Sent: Wednesday, February 18, 2009 3:23 PM
To: Parr, Gordon D
Subject: RE: Vehicle Certificate of Conformance
Hi Gordon,
The "grandfather" policy is for grey market vehicles registered in
California prior to the effective date of the California regulation,
June 1 1988. Vehicles registered after that date are required to meet
our lab test requirements. Unfortunately, if the registration is not
continuous (for example, the vehicle leaves the state and comes back at
a later date) the DMV will treat it like a new registration, and
therefore will require a Certificate of Conformance. If you have any
proof and can document the DMV giving you wrong information, then there may be a possibility that ARB can help, depending on the circumstance. Since any letters we write to the DMV regarding grey market vehicles needs to go out through our Public Information Office, please contact them directly for further assistance. They can be reached at 1-800-242-4450, or you can e-mail John Swanton at jswanton@arb.ca.gov.
Thanks,
-Veronica-
_________________
G-Man
85 525e (Euro spec)
81 528iA (Euro spec)
74 2002tii (many mods)
70 E3 2800 (Euro spec) 108K original KM's
3 E30's and a 96 4Runner parts hauler