Originally Posted By: Oldswagon
Originally Posted By: OVERK1LL
If meeting the emissions requirements of the era negated it from requiring at cat, I get a bit of a chuckle out of that.
Here's why:
That is a stock 1987 302 with ~285,000Km on it. It has no cats and no air pump. Only an EGR and PCV valve.
Would it have done better with cats and the air pump? Absolutely! But it still passed without them
I live out of the "Drive Clean" area in Ontario, but I was under the impression that you had to pass a visual inspection as well as the sniffer test? How'd you get the Mustang to pass without cats in place? I know it's an offence in Ontario to remove the cats from your car and it's a big fine. Don't get me wrong, I am NOT criticizing you, I've taken cats off over the years too, but I was always worried about getting busted by the MOE guys. That said, when we did the exhaust on my brother's '76 Chevelle last year, we decided to run twin high flow cats instead of removing them for the peace of mind.
Back in '03 I don't think there was a visual. They slapped the car on the rollers and either it passed or didn't. This was the car's last E-test IIRC. Though it may have had one in '05, I can't remember. If there was another, it passed it too.
The car has been in the garage since late'05 when it rocked out playing Raiders of the Lost Ditch and the powertrain is in a new body. And yes, the fine for being without cats is rather large. Sort of sad, since the car was exempt due to its age when they revised the emissions rules to omit cars 1987 and earlier.
Historically, Peterborough has not been a place that had a lot of MTO roadside checks. In recent years, this has changed. I had the Lincoln pulled over. Got a fine for no pollution pump. It was seized solid and I removed it.
I've got a set of Magnaflow high-flows on the Lincoln and like them a lot. I really hate the emissions laws. If the car passes the test without the equipment, I don't think I should be required to have it. It is obviously "clean enough" to pass the test, and subsequently is "clean enough" to be on the road free and clear.