Mon, 06/01/2015 - 11:36
SEMA News—June 2015

LEGISLATIVE AND TECHNICAL AFFAIRS
By Steve McDonald

Law and Order

STATE UPDATE

Arkansas Miles Traveled Tax: Legislation to allow the state to implement a pilot program that charged drivers based on vehicle miles traveled was withdrawn by the bill’s sponsor after a public outcry in Arkansas. Under the measure, participants in the program would have been taxed 1.5 cents per each mile the subject vehicle traveled on Arkansas roadways. The bill could have created privacy concerns and penalized national efforts to create a more fuel-efficient vehicle fleet by taxing drivers based on vehicle mileage.

Florida Miles Traveled Tax: A Florida House subcommittee approved amended legislation that originally directed the state to undertake a study on the impact of implementing a system that charges drivers based on vehicle miles traveled (VMT). Under the amendment, the entire program has been deleted from the bill. However, a Florida Senate version of the bill has been approved by the Senate Transportation Committee and is pending in the Regulated Industries Committee. The bill provides that the Center for Urban Transportation, in consultation with the Florida Transportation Commission, would establish a pilot program to study the feasibility of implementing a system that charges drivers based on VMT. As gas tax revenues decrease due to hybrid and electric vehicle ownership, states are looking for new sources of funding for pet projects. The Senate bill allows the Center for Urban Transportation to spend up to $400,000 for the study and pilot project design and provides for the implementation of the pilot program in 2017.

Hawaii Ethanol: Legislation to remove the requirement that gasoline offered for sale in the state contain a percentage of ethanol was approved by the Hawaii Senate and sent to the House with a significant amendment. Under the amended bill, the effective date of the repeal would be July 1, 2050. The original date for the repeal was July 1, 2015. This amendment renders the bill almost useless to the thousands of older cars that are currently most negatively affected by ethanol blends. The bill will now be considered by two additional House committees. Currently, the state requires that gasoline sold in the state for use in motor vehicles contain 10% ethanol by volume.

Iowa Single License Plate: Legislation that would provide for the issuance of a single rear-mounted license plate for motor vehicles was approved by the House Transportation Committee and will next be considered in a vote by the full Iowa House of Representatives. The bill would protect the aesthetic contours of certain vehicles and relieve vehicle owners of the burden and expense of having to create mounting holes on some original bumpers. The measure would also save money, conserve resources and bring Iowa in line with other states that are moving to a single-plate requirement.

Kentucky Property Tax: Legislation to put in place a new and more beneficial valuation procedure for older vehicles was signed into law by Governor Steve Beshear. Under the new law, vehicles 20 years old or older would no longer be presumed to be in “original factory” or “classic” condition for purposes of the property tax. Original factory and classic vehicles are currently assessed as high-value collectibles. This measure instead provides three options for assessing the value of these vehicles. Under each option, the value of the vehicle would be reduced by 10% each year.

Maine Ethanol: In 2013, SAN-supported legislation to prohibit the sale and distribution of corn-based ethanol in Maine was signed into law. Under the new law, 10 other states or a number of states with a collective population of 30,000,000 would have to enact a similar prohibition before the Maine law could go into effect. This year, legislation has been introduced to amend the law to provide that this prohibition would take effect if only three other states have enacted laws that prohibit the sale of motor fuel containing corn-based ethanol.

Maryland Historic Vehicles: SEMA is opposing legislation to increase the age requirement for vehicles eligible for registration as “historic motor vehicles.” Under a bill approved by the House of Delegates, the age requirement would be raised from 20 to at least 30 years old. The bill is now pending in the Senate Judicial Proceedings Committee. While the bill claims to address unsubstantiated claims of abuse, the Motor Vehicle Administration is already authorized by regulation to suspend the registration of any historic vehicle for use that is inconsistent with the registration requirements.

Maryland Single Plates: Amended House legislation to require the issuance of only a single license plate for historic vehicles and street rods was approved by the House of Delegates. The bill now moves to the Senate Judicial Proceedings Committee for consideration. Under the amendment, the single-plate option would be available only to owners of historic vehicles that are 60 years old and older. The bill no longer affords this option to street rods or later-model historics.

Nebraska Single License Plate: Legislation to provide for the issuance (for a $100 fee) of a single license plate for passenger cars that were not originally equipped with a bracket on the front of the vehicle to display a plate was approved by the Transportation and Telecommunications Committee. The bill will now be considered in a vote by all legislators. If enacted into law, the single-plate option would take effect on January 1, 2017.

Nevada Classic Vehicles: Legislation, opposed by SEMA, to drastically alter the requirements for vehicles eligible for registration as a “classic vehicle” was introduced. Under the bill, the special plates would be allowed only for passenger cars and require that owners provide proof satisfactory to the state that the vehicle is driven solely for personal use and not more than 5,000 miles during an annual registration period. The owner would also be required to have another passenger car or motorcycle registered during the entire registration period. The bill also would exclude light commercial vehicles from eligibility.

New Hampshire Antique Trucks: Legislation to include trucks more than 25 years old (regardless of weight) in the definition of eligible “antique motor vehicles” was approved by the House of Representatives and sent to the Senate Transportation Committee for consideration. The bill provides the option for older trucks to take advantage of the many accommodations available to antique motor vehicles.

New Mexico Replica Cars: A version of SEMA-model legislation to ease the process by which replica cars are titled and registered died when the legislature adjourned for the year. The bill had been approved by the full House of Representatives and was awaiting a vote by the full Senate. Among other things, the bill created a specific registration and titling class for replicas; provided that the model year is the year of the model or brand that a replica car most resembles; exempted replica cars from state and local laws or ordinances requiring periodic vehicle or vehicle-emissions inspections and testing; and provided that replica cars need not have equipment that was not required by state or federal law in its model year.

North Dakota Vehicle Modifications: A bill that originally sought to increase the population of vehicles prohibited from modifying the manufacturer’s original suspension, steering or brake system was amended and approved by the House of Representatives. The bill has been sent to the Senate for concurrence with the amendments. Under the amendment, the bill would no longer restrict modifications on vehicles weighing between 7,000 and 10,000 lbs.

Tennessee Emissions: Amended legislation to extend the emissions-inspection exemption for new cars was approved by the House Government Operations Committee. Under the original bill, vehicles that are three years old and newer and that have an odometer reading of less than 36,000 miles would be excused from the emissions test. Under the newly amended bill, all vehicles three years old and newer would be excused regardless of mileage. Current law exempts only new motor vehicles being registered for the first time or one year from initial registration.

Texas Ethanol: Legislation to prohibit the sale of motor fuel with an ethanol mixture was introduced in the Texas House of Representatives. The measure recognizes that ethanol fuels cause problems with fuel pumps and fuel gauges as well as other engine performance issues, especially over a period of time when the vehicle is not used.

Virginia Exhaust: Governor Terry McAuliffe signed into law legislation to exempt certain antique motor vehicles from the requirement that they have exhaust systems of a type installed as standard factory equipment or comparable to that designed as factory equipment. The new law, which SEMA supported, provides this exemption only to antique vehicles manufactured prior to 1950 and containing engines comparable to those designed as standard factory equipment for use on those vehicles. The new law recognizes that factory replacement parts or comparables are not always readily available for antique motor vehicles manufactured prior to 1950.

West Virginia Legislation: Several bills introduced in 2015 failed to be approved by both houses of the legislature prior to the adjournment of the session. Among these were the following: A resolution to designate the second Friday in July as West Virginia Collector Car Appreciation Day was approved by the full House of Delegates but stalled in the Senate; a bill based on SEMA-model legislation that would have allowed owners to install and use aftermarket modified exhaust systems that meet a 95-decibel limit was not given committee consideration; legislation to allow roof-mounted off-road light bars to be uncovered when vehicles are operated on roads and highways was approved by the House Roads and Transportation Committee and referred to the House Judiciary Committee, where it did not receive committee consideration; a bill to make it a criminal offense to disturb the peace with “noise from an exhaust system” was not given committee consideration; and a measure to exempt all motor vehicles from personal property taxes also did not receive committee consideration.

FEDERAL UPDATE

Estate Taxes: The U.S. House Ways and Means Committee passed legislation on a straight party-line vote to repeal the estate tax. In 2012, lawmakers compromised on the current 40% tax rate with a $5 million-per-person exemption (indexed to inflation). It is unclear if there is enough support to repeal the tax, which now impacts an estimated 5,500 families, including many owners of small businesses. The bill will next be sent to the floor of the House for a vote by all members. 

Mon, 06/01/2015 - 11:36
SEMA News—June 2015

LEGISLATIVE AND TECHNICAL AFFAIRS
By Steve McDonald

Law and Order

STATE UPDATE

Arkansas Miles Traveled Tax: Legislation to allow the state to implement a pilot program that charged drivers based on vehicle miles traveled was withdrawn by the bill’s sponsor after a public outcry in Arkansas. Under the measure, participants in the program would have been taxed 1.5 cents per each mile the subject vehicle traveled on Arkansas roadways. The bill could have created privacy concerns and penalized national efforts to create a more fuel-efficient vehicle fleet by taxing drivers based on vehicle mileage.

Florida Miles Traveled Tax: A Florida House subcommittee approved amended legislation that originally directed the state to undertake a study on the impact of implementing a system that charges drivers based on vehicle miles traveled (VMT). Under the amendment, the entire program has been deleted from the bill. However, a Florida Senate version of the bill has been approved by the Senate Transportation Committee and is pending in the Regulated Industries Committee. The bill provides that the Center for Urban Transportation, in consultation with the Florida Transportation Commission, would establish a pilot program to study the feasibility of implementing a system that charges drivers based on VMT. As gas tax revenues decrease due to hybrid and electric vehicle ownership, states are looking for new sources of funding for pet projects. The Senate bill allows the Center for Urban Transportation to spend up to $400,000 for the study and pilot project design and provides for the implementation of the pilot program in 2017.

Hawaii Ethanol: Legislation to remove the requirement that gasoline offered for sale in the state contain a percentage of ethanol was approved by the Hawaii Senate and sent to the House with a significant amendment. Under the amended bill, the effective date of the repeal would be July 1, 2050. The original date for the repeal was July 1, 2015. This amendment renders the bill almost useless to the thousands of older cars that are currently most negatively affected by ethanol blends. The bill will now be considered by two additional House committees. Currently, the state requires that gasoline sold in the state for use in motor vehicles contain 10% ethanol by volume.

Iowa Single License Plate: Legislation that would provide for the issuance of a single rear-mounted license plate for motor vehicles was approved by the House Transportation Committee and will next be considered in a vote by the full Iowa House of Representatives. The bill would protect the aesthetic contours of certain vehicles and relieve vehicle owners of the burden and expense of having to create mounting holes on some original bumpers. The measure would also save money, conserve resources and bring Iowa in line with other states that are moving to a single-plate requirement.

Kentucky Property Tax: Legislation to put in place a new and more beneficial valuation procedure for older vehicles was signed into law by Governor Steve Beshear. Under the new law, vehicles 20 years old or older would no longer be presumed to be in “original factory” or “classic” condition for purposes of the property tax. Original factory and classic vehicles are currently assessed as high-value collectibles. This measure instead provides three options for assessing the value of these vehicles. Under each option, the value of the vehicle would be reduced by 10% each year.

Maine Ethanol: In 2013, SAN-supported legislation to prohibit the sale and distribution of corn-based ethanol in Maine was signed into law. Under the new law, 10 other states or a number of states with a collective population of 30,000,000 would have to enact a similar prohibition before the Maine law could go into effect. This year, legislation has been introduced to amend the law to provide that this prohibition would take effect if only three other states have enacted laws that prohibit the sale of motor fuel containing corn-based ethanol.

Maryland Historic Vehicles: SEMA is opposing legislation to increase the age requirement for vehicles eligible for registration as “historic motor vehicles.” Under a bill approved by the House of Delegates, the age requirement would be raised from 20 to at least 30 years old. The bill is now pending in the Senate Judicial Proceedings Committee. While the bill claims to address unsubstantiated claims of abuse, the Motor Vehicle Administration is already authorized by regulation to suspend the registration of any historic vehicle for use that is inconsistent with the registration requirements.

Maryland Single Plates: Amended House legislation to require the issuance of only a single license plate for historic vehicles and street rods was approved by the House of Delegates. The bill now moves to the Senate Judicial Proceedings Committee for consideration. Under the amendment, the single-plate option would be available only to owners of historic vehicles that are 60 years old and older. The bill no longer affords this option to street rods or later-model historics.

Nebraska Single License Plate: Legislation to provide for the issuance (for a $100 fee) of a single license plate for passenger cars that were not originally equipped with a bracket on the front of the vehicle to display a plate was approved by the Transportation and Telecommunications Committee. The bill will now be considered in a vote by all legislators. If enacted into law, the single-plate option would take effect on January 1, 2017.

Nevada Classic Vehicles: Legislation, opposed by SEMA, to drastically alter the requirements for vehicles eligible for registration as a “classic vehicle” was introduced. Under the bill, the special plates would be allowed only for passenger cars and require that owners provide proof satisfactory to the state that the vehicle is driven solely for personal use and not more than 5,000 miles during an annual registration period. The owner would also be required to have another passenger car or motorcycle registered during the entire registration period. The bill also would exclude light commercial vehicles from eligibility.

New Hampshire Antique Trucks: Legislation to include trucks more than 25 years old (regardless of weight) in the definition of eligible “antique motor vehicles” was approved by the House of Representatives and sent to the Senate Transportation Committee for consideration. The bill provides the option for older trucks to take advantage of the many accommodations available to antique motor vehicles.

New Mexico Replica Cars: A version of SEMA-model legislation to ease the process by which replica cars are titled and registered died when the legislature adjourned for the year. The bill had been approved by the full House of Representatives and was awaiting a vote by the full Senate. Among other things, the bill created a specific registration and titling class for replicas; provided that the model year is the year of the model or brand that a replica car most resembles; exempted replica cars from state and local laws or ordinances requiring periodic vehicle or vehicle-emissions inspections and testing; and provided that replica cars need not have equipment that was not required by state or federal law in its model year.

North Dakota Vehicle Modifications: A bill that originally sought to increase the population of vehicles prohibited from modifying the manufacturer’s original suspension, steering or brake system was amended and approved by the House of Representatives. The bill has been sent to the Senate for concurrence with the amendments. Under the amendment, the bill would no longer restrict modifications on vehicles weighing between 7,000 and 10,000 lbs.

Tennessee Emissions: Amended legislation to extend the emissions-inspection exemption for new cars was approved by the House Government Operations Committee. Under the original bill, vehicles that are three years old and newer and that have an odometer reading of less than 36,000 miles would be excused from the emissions test. Under the newly amended bill, all vehicles three years old and newer would be excused regardless of mileage. Current law exempts only new motor vehicles being registered for the first time or one year from initial registration.

Texas Ethanol: Legislation to prohibit the sale of motor fuel with an ethanol mixture was introduced in the Texas House of Representatives. The measure recognizes that ethanol fuels cause problems with fuel pumps and fuel gauges as well as other engine performance issues, especially over a period of time when the vehicle is not used.

Virginia Exhaust: Governor Terry McAuliffe signed into law legislation to exempt certain antique motor vehicles from the requirement that they have exhaust systems of a type installed as standard factory equipment or comparable to that designed as factory equipment. The new law, which SEMA supported, provides this exemption only to antique vehicles manufactured prior to 1950 and containing engines comparable to those designed as standard factory equipment for use on those vehicles. The new law recognizes that factory replacement parts or comparables are not always readily available for antique motor vehicles manufactured prior to 1950.

West Virginia Legislation: Several bills introduced in 2015 failed to be approved by both houses of the legislature prior to the adjournment of the session. Among these were the following: A resolution to designate the second Friday in July as West Virginia Collector Car Appreciation Day was approved by the full House of Delegates but stalled in the Senate; a bill based on SEMA-model legislation that would have allowed owners to install and use aftermarket modified exhaust systems that meet a 95-decibel limit was not given committee consideration; legislation to allow roof-mounted off-road light bars to be uncovered when vehicles are operated on roads and highways was approved by the House Roads and Transportation Committee and referred to the House Judiciary Committee, where it did not receive committee consideration; a bill to make it a criminal offense to disturb the peace with “noise from an exhaust system” was not given committee consideration; and a measure to exempt all motor vehicles from personal property taxes also did not receive committee consideration.

FEDERAL UPDATE

Estate Taxes: The U.S. House Ways and Means Committee passed legislation on a straight party-line vote to repeal the estate tax. In 2012, lawmakers compromised on the current 40% tax rate with a $5 million-per-person exemption (indexed to inflation). It is unclear if there is enough support to repeal the tax, which now impacts an estimated 5,500 families, including many owners of small businesses. The bill will next be sent to the floor of the House for a vote by all members. 

Mon, 06/01/2015 - 11:36
SEMA News—June 2015

LEGISLATIVE AND TECHNICAL AFFAIRS
By Steve McDonald

Law and Order

STATE UPDATE

Arkansas Miles Traveled Tax: Legislation to allow the state to implement a pilot program that charged drivers based on vehicle miles traveled was withdrawn by the bill’s sponsor after a public outcry in Arkansas. Under the measure, participants in the program would have been taxed 1.5 cents per each mile the subject vehicle traveled on Arkansas roadways. The bill could have created privacy concerns and penalized national efforts to create a more fuel-efficient vehicle fleet by taxing drivers based on vehicle mileage.

Florida Miles Traveled Tax: A Florida House subcommittee approved amended legislation that originally directed the state to undertake a study on the impact of implementing a system that charges drivers based on vehicle miles traveled (VMT). Under the amendment, the entire program has been deleted from the bill. However, a Florida Senate version of the bill has been approved by the Senate Transportation Committee and is pending in the Regulated Industries Committee. The bill provides that the Center for Urban Transportation, in consultation with the Florida Transportation Commission, would establish a pilot program to study the feasibility of implementing a system that charges drivers based on VMT. As gas tax revenues decrease due to hybrid and electric vehicle ownership, states are looking for new sources of funding for pet projects. The Senate bill allows the Center for Urban Transportation to spend up to $400,000 for the study and pilot project design and provides for the implementation of the pilot program in 2017.

Hawaii Ethanol: Legislation to remove the requirement that gasoline offered for sale in the state contain a percentage of ethanol was approved by the Hawaii Senate and sent to the House with a significant amendment. Under the amended bill, the effective date of the repeal would be July 1, 2050. The original date for the repeal was July 1, 2015. This amendment renders the bill almost useless to the thousands of older cars that are currently most negatively affected by ethanol blends. The bill will now be considered by two additional House committees. Currently, the state requires that gasoline sold in the state for use in motor vehicles contain 10% ethanol by volume.

Iowa Single License Plate: Legislation that would provide for the issuance of a single rear-mounted license plate for motor vehicles was approved by the House Transportation Committee and will next be considered in a vote by the full Iowa House of Representatives. The bill would protect the aesthetic contours of certain vehicles and relieve vehicle owners of the burden and expense of having to create mounting holes on some original bumpers. The measure would also save money, conserve resources and bring Iowa in line with other states that are moving to a single-plate requirement.

Kentucky Property Tax: Legislation to put in place a new and more beneficial valuation procedure for older vehicles was signed into law by Governor Steve Beshear. Under the new law, vehicles 20 years old or older would no longer be presumed to be in “original factory” or “classic” condition for purposes of the property tax. Original factory and classic vehicles are currently assessed as high-value collectibles. This measure instead provides three options for assessing the value of these vehicles. Under each option, the value of the vehicle would be reduced by 10% each year.

Maine Ethanol: In 2013, SAN-supported legislation to prohibit the sale and distribution of corn-based ethanol in Maine was signed into law. Under the new law, 10 other states or a number of states with a collective population of 30,000,000 would have to enact a similar prohibition before the Maine law could go into effect. This year, legislation has been introduced to amend the law to provide that this prohibition would take effect if only three other states have enacted laws that prohibit the sale of motor fuel containing corn-based ethanol.

Maryland Historic Vehicles: SEMA is opposing legislation to increase the age requirement for vehicles eligible for registration as “historic motor vehicles.” Under a bill approved by the House of Delegates, the age requirement would be raised from 20 to at least 30 years old. The bill is now pending in the Senate Judicial Proceedings Committee. While the bill claims to address unsubstantiated claims of abuse, the Motor Vehicle Administration is already authorized by regulation to suspend the registration of any historic vehicle for use that is inconsistent with the registration requirements.

Maryland Single Plates: Amended House legislation to require the issuance of only a single license plate for historic vehicles and street rods was approved by the House of Delegates. The bill now moves to the Senate Judicial Proceedings Committee for consideration. Under the amendment, the single-plate option would be available only to owners of historic vehicles that are 60 years old and older. The bill no longer affords this option to street rods or later-model historics.

Nebraska Single License Plate: Legislation to provide for the issuance (for a $100 fee) of a single license plate for passenger cars that were not originally equipped with a bracket on the front of the vehicle to display a plate was approved by the Transportation and Telecommunications Committee. The bill will now be considered in a vote by all legislators. If enacted into law, the single-plate option would take effect on January 1, 2017.

Nevada Classic Vehicles: Legislation, opposed by SEMA, to drastically alter the requirements for vehicles eligible for registration as a “classic vehicle” was introduced. Under the bill, the special plates would be allowed only for passenger cars and require that owners provide proof satisfactory to the state that the vehicle is driven solely for personal use and not more than 5,000 miles during an annual registration period. The owner would also be required to have another passenger car or motorcycle registered during the entire registration period. The bill also would exclude light commercial vehicles from eligibility.

New Hampshire Antique Trucks: Legislation to include trucks more than 25 years old (regardless of weight) in the definition of eligible “antique motor vehicles” was approved by the House of Representatives and sent to the Senate Transportation Committee for consideration. The bill provides the option for older trucks to take advantage of the many accommodations available to antique motor vehicles.

New Mexico Replica Cars: A version of SEMA-model legislation to ease the process by which replica cars are titled and registered died when the legislature adjourned for the year. The bill had been approved by the full House of Representatives and was awaiting a vote by the full Senate. Among other things, the bill created a specific registration and titling class for replicas; provided that the model year is the year of the model or brand that a replica car most resembles; exempted replica cars from state and local laws or ordinances requiring periodic vehicle or vehicle-emissions inspections and testing; and provided that replica cars need not have equipment that was not required by state or federal law in its model year.

North Dakota Vehicle Modifications: A bill that originally sought to increase the population of vehicles prohibited from modifying the manufacturer’s original suspension, steering or brake system was amended and approved by the House of Representatives. The bill has been sent to the Senate for concurrence with the amendments. Under the amendment, the bill would no longer restrict modifications on vehicles weighing between 7,000 and 10,000 lbs.

Tennessee Emissions: Amended legislation to extend the emissions-inspection exemption for new cars was approved by the House Government Operations Committee. Under the original bill, vehicles that are three years old and newer and that have an odometer reading of less than 36,000 miles would be excused from the emissions test. Under the newly amended bill, all vehicles three years old and newer would be excused regardless of mileage. Current law exempts only new motor vehicles being registered for the first time or one year from initial registration.

Texas Ethanol: Legislation to prohibit the sale of motor fuel with an ethanol mixture was introduced in the Texas House of Representatives. The measure recognizes that ethanol fuels cause problems with fuel pumps and fuel gauges as well as other engine performance issues, especially over a period of time when the vehicle is not used.

Virginia Exhaust: Governor Terry McAuliffe signed into law legislation to exempt certain antique motor vehicles from the requirement that they have exhaust systems of a type installed as standard factory equipment or comparable to that designed as factory equipment. The new law, which SEMA supported, provides this exemption only to antique vehicles manufactured prior to 1950 and containing engines comparable to those designed as standard factory equipment for use on those vehicles. The new law recognizes that factory replacement parts or comparables are not always readily available for antique motor vehicles manufactured prior to 1950.

West Virginia Legislation: Several bills introduced in 2015 failed to be approved by both houses of the legislature prior to the adjournment of the session. Among these were the following: A resolution to designate the second Friday in July as West Virginia Collector Car Appreciation Day was approved by the full House of Delegates but stalled in the Senate; a bill based on SEMA-model legislation that would have allowed owners to install and use aftermarket modified exhaust systems that meet a 95-decibel limit was not given committee consideration; legislation to allow roof-mounted off-road light bars to be uncovered when vehicles are operated on roads and highways was approved by the House Roads and Transportation Committee and referred to the House Judiciary Committee, where it did not receive committee consideration; a bill to make it a criminal offense to disturb the peace with “noise from an exhaust system” was not given committee consideration; and a measure to exempt all motor vehicles from personal property taxes also did not receive committee consideration.

FEDERAL UPDATE

Estate Taxes: The U.S. House Ways and Means Committee passed legislation on a straight party-line vote to repeal the estate tax. In 2012, lawmakers compromised on the current 40% tax rate with a $5 million-per-person exemption (indexed to inflation). It is unclear if there is enough support to repeal the tax, which now impacts an estimated 5,500 families, including many owners of small businesses. The bill will next be sent to the floor of the House for a vote by all members. 

Mon, 06/01/2015 - 11:36
SEMA News—June 2015

LEGISLATIVE AND TECHNICAL AFFAIRS
By Steve McDonald

Law and Order

STATE UPDATE

Arkansas Miles Traveled Tax: Legislation to allow the state to implement a pilot program that charged drivers based on vehicle miles traveled was withdrawn by the bill’s sponsor after a public outcry in Arkansas. Under the measure, participants in the program would have been taxed 1.5 cents per each mile the subject vehicle traveled on Arkansas roadways. The bill could have created privacy concerns and penalized national efforts to create a more fuel-efficient vehicle fleet by taxing drivers based on vehicle mileage.

Florida Miles Traveled Tax: A Florida House subcommittee approved amended legislation that originally directed the state to undertake a study on the impact of implementing a system that charges drivers based on vehicle miles traveled (VMT). Under the amendment, the entire program has been deleted from the bill. However, a Florida Senate version of the bill has been approved by the Senate Transportation Committee and is pending in the Regulated Industries Committee. The bill provides that the Center for Urban Transportation, in consultation with the Florida Transportation Commission, would establish a pilot program to study the feasibility of implementing a system that charges drivers based on VMT. As gas tax revenues decrease due to hybrid and electric vehicle ownership, states are looking for new sources of funding for pet projects. The Senate bill allows the Center for Urban Transportation to spend up to $400,000 for the study and pilot project design and provides for the implementation of the pilot program in 2017.

Hawaii Ethanol: Legislation to remove the requirement that gasoline offered for sale in the state contain a percentage of ethanol was approved by the Hawaii Senate and sent to the House with a significant amendment. Under the amended bill, the effective date of the repeal would be July 1, 2050. The original date for the repeal was July 1, 2015. This amendment renders the bill almost useless to the thousands of older cars that are currently most negatively affected by ethanol blends. The bill will now be considered by two additional House committees. Currently, the state requires that gasoline sold in the state for use in motor vehicles contain 10% ethanol by volume.

Iowa Single License Plate: Legislation that would provide for the issuance of a single rear-mounted license plate for motor vehicles was approved by the House Transportation Committee and will next be considered in a vote by the full Iowa House of Representatives. The bill would protect the aesthetic contours of certain vehicles and relieve vehicle owners of the burden and expense of having to create mounting holes on some original bumpers. The measure would also save money, conserve resources and bring Iowa in line with other states that are moving to a single-plate requirement.

Kentucky Property Tax: Legislation to put in place a new and more beneficial valuation procedure for older vehicles was signed into law by Governor Steve Beshear. Under the new law, vehicles 20 years old or older would no longer be presumed to be in “original factory” or “classic” condition for purposes of the property tax. Original factory and classic vehicles are currently assessed as high-value collectibles. This measure instead provides three options for assessing the value of these vehicles. Under each option, the value of the vehicle would be reduced by 10% each year.

Maine Ethanol: In 2013, SAN-supported legislation to prohibit the sale and distribution of corn-based ethanol in Maine was signed into law. Under the new law, 10 other states or a number of states with a collective population of 30,000,000 would have to enact a similar prohibition before the Maine law could go into effect. This year, legislation has been introduced to amend the law to provide that this prohibition would take effect if only three other states have enacted laws that prohibit the sale of motor fuel containing corn-based ethanol.

Maryland Historic Vehicles: SEMA is opposing legislation to increase the age requirement for vehicles eligible for registration as “historic motor vehicles.” Under a bill approved by the House of Delegates, the age requirement would be raised from 20 to at least 30 years old. The bill is now pending in the Senate Judicial Proceedings Committee. While the bill claims to address unsubstantiated claims of abuse, the Motor Vehicle Administration is already authorized by regulation to suspend the registration of any historic vehicle for use that is inconsistent with the registration requirements.

Maryland Single Plates: Amended House legislation to require the issuance of only a single license plate for historic vehicles and street rods was approved by the House of Delegates. The bill now moves to the Senate Judicial Proceedings Committee for consideration. Under the amendment, the single-plate option would be available only to owners of historic vehicles that are 60 years old and older. The bill no longer affords this option to street rods or later-model historics.

Nebraska Single License Plate: Legislation to provide for the issuance (for a $100 fee) of a single license plate for passenger cars that were not originally equipped with a bracket on the front of the vehicle to display a plate was approved by the Transportation and Telecommunications Committee. The bill will now be considered in a vote by all legislators. If enacted into law, the single-plate option would take effect on January 1, 2017.

Nevada Classic Vehicles: Legislation, opposed by SEMA, to drastically alter the requirements for vehicles eligible for registration as a “classic vehicle” was introduced. Under the bill, the special plates would be allowed only for passenger cars and require that owners provide proof satisfactory to the state that the vehicle is driven solely for personal use and not more than 5,000 miles during an annual registration period. The owner would also be required to have another passenger car or motorcycle registered during the entire registration period. The bill also would exclude light commercial vehicles from eligibility.

New Hampshire Antique Trucks: Legislation to include trucks more than 25 years old (regardless of weight) in the definition of eligible “antique motor vehicles” was approved by the House of Representatives and sent to the Senate Transportation Committee for consideration. The bill provides the option for older trucks to take advantage of the many accommodations available to antique motor vehicles.

New Mexico Replica Cars: A version of SEMA-model legislation to ease the process by which replica cars are titled and registered died when the legislature adjourned for the year. The bill had been approved by the full House of Representatives and was awaiting a vote by the full Senate. Among other things, the bill created a specific registration and titling class for replicas; provided that the model year is the year of the model or brand that a replica car most resembles; exempted replica cars from state and local laws or ordinances requiring periodic vehicle or vehicle-emissions inspections and testing; and provided that replica cars need not have equipment that was not required by state or federal law in its model year.

North Dakota Vehicle Modifications: A bill that originally sought to increase the population of vehicles prohibited from modifying the manufacturer’s original suspension, steering or brake system was amended and approved by the House of Representatives. The bill has been sent to the Senate for concurrence with the amendments. Under the amendment, the bill would no longer restrict modifications on vehicles weighing between 7,000 and 10,000 lbs.

Tennessee Emissions: Amended legislation to extend the emissions-inspection exemption for new cars was approved by the House Government Operations Committee. Under the original bill, vehicles that are three years old and newer and that have an odometer reading of less than 36,000 miles would be excused from the emissions test. Under the newly amended bill, all vehicles three years old and newer would be excused regardless of mileage. Current law exempts only new motor vehicles being registered for the first time or one year from initial registration.

Texas Ethanol: Legislation to prohibit the sale of motor fuel with an ethanol mixture was introduced in the Texas House of Representatives. The measure recognizes that ethanol fuels cause problems with fuel pumps and fuel gauges as well as other engine performance issues, especially over a period of time when the vehicle is not used.

Virginia Exhaust: Governor Terry McAuliffe signed into law legislation to exempt certain antique motor vehicles from the requirement that they have exhaust systems of a type installed as standard factory equipment or comparable to that designed as factory equipment. The new law, which SEMA supported, provides this exemption only to antique vehicles manufactured prior to 1950 and containing engines comparable to those designed as standard factory equipment for use on those vehicles. The new law recognizes that factory replacement parts or comparables are not always readily available for antique motor vehicles manufactured prior to 1950.

West Virginia Legislation: Several bills introduced in 2015 failed to be approved by both houses of the legislature prior to the adjournment of the session. Among these were the following: A resolution to designate the second Friday in July as West Virginia Collector Car Appreciation Day was approved by the full House of Delegates but stalled in the Senate; a bill based on SEMA-model legislation that would have allowed owners to install and use aftermarket modified exhaust systems that meet a 95-decibel limit was not given committee consideration; legislation to allow roof-mounted off-road light bars to be uncovered when vehicles are operated on roads and highways was approved by the House Roads and Transportation Committee and referred to the House Judiciary Committee, where it did not receive committee consideration; a bill to make it a criminal offense to disturb the peace with “noise from an exhaust system” was not given committee consideration; and a measure to exempt all motor vehicles from personal property taxes also did not receive committee consideration.

FEDERAL UPDATE

Estate Taxes: The U.S. House Ways and Means Committee passed legislation on a straight party-line vote to repeal the estate tax. In 2012, lawmakers compromised on the current 40% tax rate with a $5 million-per-person exemption (indexed to inflation). It is unclear if there is enough support to repeal the tax, which now impacts an estimated 5,500 families, including many owners of small businesses. The bill will next be sent to the floor of the House for a vote by all members. 

Mon, 06/01/2015 - 11:36
SEMA News—June 2015

LEGISLATIVE AND TECHNICAL AFFAIRS
By Steve McDonald

Law and Order

STATE UPDATE

Arkansas Miles Traveled Tax: Legislation to allow the state to implement a pilot program that charged drivers based on vehicle miles traveled was withdrawn by the bill’s sponsor after a public outcry in Arkansas. Under the measure, participants in the program would have been taxed 1.5 cents per each mile the subject vehicle traveled on Arkansas roadways. The bill could have created privacy concerns and penalized national efforts to create a more fuel-efficient vehicle fleet by taxing drivers based on vehicle mileage.

Florida Miles Traveled Tax: A Florida House subcommittee approved amended legislation that originally directed the state to undertake a study on the impact of implementing a system that charges drivers based on vehicle miles traveled (VMT). Under the amendment, the entire program has been deleted from the bill. However, a Florida Senate version of the bill has been approved by the Senate Transportation Committee and is pending in the Regulated Industries Committee. The bill provides that the Center for Urban Transportation, in consultation with the Florida Transportation Commission, would establish a pilot program to study the feasibility of implementing a system that charges drivers based on VMT. As gas tax revenues decrease due to hybrid and electric vehicle ownership, states are looking for new sources of funding for pet projects. The Senate bill allows the Center for Urban Transportation to spend up to $400,000 for the study and pilot project design and provides for the implementation of the pilot program in 2017.

Hawaii Ethanol: Legislation to remove the requirement that gasoline offered for sale in the state contain a percentage of ethanol was approved by the Hawaii Senate and sent to the House with a significant amendment. Under the amended bill, the effective date of the repeal would be July 1, 2050. The original date for the repeal was July 1, 2015. This amendment renders the bill almost useless to the thousands of older cars that are currently most negatively affected by ethanol blends. The bill will now be considered by two additional House committees. Currently, the state requires that gasoline sold in the state for use in motor vehicles contain 10% ethanol by volume.

Iowa Single License Plate: Legislation that would provide for the issuance of a single rear-mounted license plate for motor vehicles was approved by the House Transportation Committee and will next be considered in a vote by the full Iowa House of Representatives. The bill would protect the aesthetic contours of certain vehicles and relieve vehicle owners of the burden and expense of having to create mounting holes on some original bumpers. The measure would also save money, conserve resources and bring Iowa in line with other states that are moving to a single-plate requirement.

Kentucky Property Tax: Legislation to put in place a new and more beneficial valuation procedure for older vehicles was signed into law by Governor Steve Beshear. Under the new law, vehicles 20 years old or older would no longer be presumed to be in “original factory” or “classic” condition for purposes of the property tax. Original factory and classic vehicles are currently assessed as high-value collectibles. This measure instead provides three options for assessing the value of these vehicles. Under each option, the value of the vehicle would be reduced by 10% each year.

Maine Ethanol: In 2013, SAN-supported legislation to prohibit the sale and distribution of corn-based ethanol in Maine was signed into law. Under the new law, 10 other states or a number of states with a collective population of 30,000,000 would have to enact a similar prohibition before the Maine law could go into effect. This year, legislation has been introduced to amend the law to provide that this prohibition would take effect if only three other states have enacted laws that prohibit the sale of motor fuel containing corn-based ethanol.

Maryland Historic Vehicles: SEMA is opposing legislation to increase the age requirement for vehicles eligible for registration as “historic motor vehicles.” Under a bill approved by the House of Delegates, the age requirement would be raised from 20 to at least 30 years old. The bill is now pending in the Senate Judicial Proceedings Committee. While the bill claims to address unsubstantiated claims of abuse, the Motor Vehicle Administration is already authorized by regulation to suspend the registration of any historic vehicle for use that is inconsistent with the registration requirements.

Maryland Single Plates: Amended House legislation to require the issuance of only a single license plate for historic vehicles and street rods was approved by the House of Delegates. The bill now moves to the Senate Judicial Proceedings Committee for consideration. Under the amendment, the single-plate option would be available only to owners of historic vehicles that are 60 years old and older. The bill no longer affords this option to street rods or later-model historics.

Nebraska Single License Plate: Legislation to provide for the issuance (for a $100 fee) of a single license plate for passenger cars that were not originally equipped with a bracket on the front of the vehicle to display a plate was approved by the Transportation and Telecommunications Committee. The bill will now be considered in a vote by all legislators. If enacted into law, the single-plate option would take effect on January 1, 2017.

Nevada Classic Vehicles: Legislation, opposed by SEMA, to drastically alter the requirements for vehicles eligible for registration as a “classic vehicle” was introduced. Under the bill, the special plates would be allowed only for passenger cars and require that owners provide proof satisfactory to the state that the vehicle is driven solely for personal use and not more than 5,000 miles during an annual registration period. The owner would also be required to have another passenger car or motorcycle registered during the entire registration period. The bill also would exclude light commercial vehicles from eligibility.

New Hampshire Antique Trucks: Legislation to include trucks more than 25 years old (regardless of weight) in the definition of eligible “antique motor vehicles” was approved by the House of Representatives and sent to the Senate Transportation Committee for consideration. The bill provides the option for older trucks to take advantage of the many accommodations available to antique motor vehicles.

New Mexico Replica Cars: A version of SEMA-model legislation to ease the process by which replica cars are titled and registered died when the legislature adjourned for the year. The bill had been approved by the full House of Representatives and was awaiting a vote by the full Senate. Among other things, the bill created a specific registration and titling class for replicas; provided that the model year is the year of the model or brand that a replica car most resembles; exempted replica cars from state and local laws or ordinances requiring periodic vehicle or vehicle-emissions inspections and testing; and provided that replica cars need not have equipment that was not required by state or federal law in its model year.

North Dakota Vehicle Modifications: A bill that originally sought to increase the population of vehicles prohibited from modifying the manufacturer’s original suspension, steering or brake system was amended and approved by the House of Representatives. The bill has been sent to the Senate for concurrence with the amendments. Under the amendment, the bill would no longer restrict modifications on vehicles weighing between 7,000 and 10,000 lbs.

Tennessee Emissions: Amended legislation to extend the emissions-inspection exemption for new cars was approved by the House Government Operations Committee. Under the original bill, vehicles that are three years old and newer and that have an odometer reading of less than 36,000 miles would be excused from the emissions test. Under the newly amended bill, all vehicles three years old and newer would be excused regardless of mileage. Current law exempts only new motor vehicles being registered for the first time or one year from initial registration.

Texas Ethanol: Legislation to prohibit the sale of motor fuel with an ethanol mixture was introduced in the Texas House of Representatives. The measure recognizes that ethanol fuels cause problems with fuel pumps and fuel gauges as well as other engine performance issues, especially over a period of time when the vehicle is not used.

Virginia Exhaust: Governor Terry McAuliffe signed into law legislation to exempt certain antique motor vehicles from the requirement that they have exhaust systems of a type installed as standard factory equipment or comparable to that designed as factory equipment. The new law, which SEMA supported, provides this exemption only to antique vehicles manufactured prior to 1950 and containing engines comparable to those designed as standard factory equipment for use on those vehicles. The new law recognizes that factory replacement parts or comparables are not always readily available for antique motor vehicles manufactured prior to 1950.

West Virginia Legislation: Several bills introduced in 2015 failed to be approved by both houses of the legislature prior to the adjournment of the session. Among these were the following: A resolution to designate the second Friday in July as West Virginia Collector Car Appreciation Day was approved by the full House of Delegates but stalled in the Senate; a bill based on SEMA-model legislation that would have allowed owners to install and use aftermarket modified exhaust systems that meet a 95-decibel limit was not given committee consideration; legislation to allow roof-mounted off-road light bars to be uncovered when vehicles are operated on roads and highways was approved by the House Roads and Transportation Committee and referred to the House Judiciary Committee, where it did not receive committee consideration; a bill to make it a criminal offense to disturb the peace with “noise from an exhaust system” was not given committee consideration; and a measure to exempt all motor vehicles from personal property taxes also did not receive committee consideration.

FEDERAL UPDATE

Estate Taxes: The U.S. House Ways and Means Committee passed legislation on a straight party-line vote to repeal the estate tax. In 2012, lawmakers compromised on the current 40% tax rate with a $5 million-per-person exemption (indexed to inflation). It is unclear if there is enough support to repeal the tax, which now impacts an estimated 5,500 families, including many owners of small businesses. The bill will next be sent to the floor of the House for a vote by all members. 

Mon, 06/01/2015 - 11:36
SEMA News—June 2015

LEGISLATIVE AND TECHNICAL AFFAIRS
By Steve McDonald

Law and Order

STATE UPDATE

Arkansas Miles Traveled Tax: Legislation to allow the state to implement a pilot program that charged drivers based on vehicle miles traveled was withdrawn by the bill’s sponsor after a public outcry in Arkansas. Under the measure, participants in the program would have been taxed 1.5 cents per each mile the subject vehicle traveled on Arkansas roadways. The bill could have created privacy concerns and penalized national efforts to create a more fuel-efficient vehicle fleet by taxing drivers based on vehicle mileage.

Florida Miles Traveled Tax: A Florida House subcommittee approved amended legislation that originally directed the state to undertake a study on the impact of implementing a system that charges drivers based on vehicle miles traveled (VMT). Under the amendment, the entire program has been deleted from the bill. However, a Florida Senate version of the bill has been approved by the Senate Transportation Committee and is pending in the Regulated Industries Committee. The bill provides that the Center for Urban Transportation, in consultation with the Florida Transportation Commission, would establish a pilot program to study the feasibility of implementing a system that charges drivers based on VMT. As gas tax revenues decrease due to hybrid and electric vehicle ownership, states are looking for new sources of funding for pet projects. The Senate bill allows the Center for Urban Transportation to spend up to $400,000 for the study and pilot project design and provides for the implementation of the pilot program in 2017.

Hawaii Ethanol: Legislation to remove the requirement that gasoline offered for sale in the state contain a percentage of ethanol was approved by the Hawaii Senate and sent to the House with a significant amendment. Under the amended bill, the effective date of the repeal would be July 1, 2050. The original date for the repeal was July 1, 2015. This amendment renders the bill almost useless to the thousands of older cars that are currently most negatively affected by ethanol blends. The bill will now be considered by two additional House committees. Currently, the state requires that gasoline sold in the state for use in motor vehicles contain 10% ethanol by volume.

Iowa Single License Plate: Legislation that would provide for the issuance of a single rear-mounted license plate for motor vehicles was approved by the House Transportation Committee and will next be considered in a vote by the full Iowa House of Representatives. The bill would protect the aesthetic contours of certain vehicles and relieve vehicle owners of the burden and expense of having to create mounting holes on some original bumpers. The measure would also save money, conserve resources and bring Iowa in line with other states that are moving to a single-plate requirement.

Kentucky Property Tax: Legislation to put in place a new and more beneficial valuation procedure for older vehicles was signed into law by Governor Steve Beshear. Under the new law, vehicles 20 years old or older would no longer be presumed to be in “original factory” or “classic” condition for purposes of the property tax. Original factory and classic vehicles are currently assessed as high-value collectibles. This measure instead provides three options for assessing the value of these vehicles. Under each option, the value of the vehicle would be reduced by 10% each year.

Maine Ethanol: In 2013, SAN-supported legislation to prohibit the sale and distribution of corn-based ethanol in Maine was signed into law. Under the new law, 10 other states or a number of states with a collective population of 30,000,000 would have to enact a similar prohibition before the Maine law could go into effect. This year, legislation has been introduced to amend the law to provide that this prohibition would take effect if only three other states have enacted laws that prohibit the sale of motor fuel containing corn-based ethanol.

Maryland Historic Vehicles: SEMA is opposing legislation to increase the age requirement for vehicles eligible for registration as “historic motor vehicles.” Under a bill approved by the House of Delegates, the age requirement would be raised from 20 to at least 30 years old. The bill is now pending in the Senate Judicial Proceedings Committee. While the bill claims to address unsubstantiated claims of abuse, the Motor Vehicle Administration is already authorized by regulation to suspend the registration of any historic vehicle for use that is inconsistent with the registration requirements.

Maryland Single Plates: Amended House legislation to require the issuance of only a single license plate for historic vehicles and street rods was approved by the House of Delegates. The bill now moves to the Senate Judicial Proceedings Committee for consideration. Under the amendment, the single-plate option would be available only to owners of historic vehicles that are 60 years old and older. The bill no longer affords this option to street rods or later-model historics.

Nebraska Single License Plate: Legislation to provide for the issuance (for a $100 fee) of a single license plate for passenger cars that were not originally equipped with a bracket on the front of the vehicle to display a plate was approved by the Transportation and Telecommunications Committee. The bill will now be considered in a vote by all legislators. If enacted into law, the single-plate option would take effect on January 1, 2017.

Nevada Classic Vehicles: Legislation, opposed by SEMA, to drastically alter the requirements for vehicles eligible for registration as a “classic vehicle” was introduced. Under the bill, the special plates would be allowed only for passenger cars and require that owners provide proof satisfactory to the state that the vehicle is driven solely for personal use and not more than 5,000 miles during an annual registration period. The owner would also be required to have another passenger car or motorcycle registered during the entire registration period. The bill also would exclude light commercial vehicles from eligibility.

New Hampshire Antique Trucks: Legislation to include trucks more than 25 years old (regardless of weight) in the definition of eligible “antique motor vehicles” was approved by the House of Representatives and sent to the Senate Transportation Committee for consideration. The bill provides the option for older trucks to take advantage of the many accommodations available to antique motor vehicles.

New Mexico Replica Cars: A version of SEMA-model legislation to ease the process by which replica cars are titled and registered died when the legislature adjourned for the year. The bill had been approved by the full House of Representatives and was awaiting a vote by the full Senate. Among other things, the bill created a specific registration and titling class for replicas; provided that the model year is the year of the model or brand that a replica car most resembles; exempted replica cars from state and local laws or ordinances requiring periodic vehicle or vehicle-emissions inspections and testing; and provided that replica cars need not have equipment that was not required by state or federal law in its model year.

North Dakota Vehicle Modifications: A bill that originally sought to increase the population of vehicles prohibited from modifying the manufacturer’s original suspension, steering or brake system was amended and approved by the House of Representatives. The bill has been sent to the Senate for concurrence with the amendments. Under the amendment, the bill would no longer restrict modifications on vehicles weighing between 7,000 and 10,000 lbs.

Tennessee Emissions: Amended legislation to extend the emissions-inspection exemption for new cars was approved by the House Government Operations Committee. Under the original bill, vehicles that are three years old and newer and that have an odometer reading of less than 36,000 miles would be excused from the emissions test. Under the newly amended bill, all vehicles three years old and newer would be excused regardless of mileage. Current law exempts only new motor vehicles being registered for the first time or one year from initial registration.

Texas Ethanol: Legislation to prohibit the sale of motor fuel with an ethanol mixture was introduced in the Texas House of Representatives. The measure recognizes that ethanol fuels cause problems with fuel pumps and fuel gauges as well as other engine performance issues, especially over a period of time when the vehicle is not used.

Virginia Exhaust: Governor Terry McAuliffe signed into law legislation to exempt certain antique motor vehicles from the requirement that they have exhaust systems of a type installed as standard factory equipment or comparable to that designed as factory equipment. The new law, which SEMA supported, provides this exemption only to antique vehicles manufactured prior to 1950 and containing engines comparable to those designed as standard factory equipment for use on those vehicles. The new law recognizes that factory replacement parts or comparables are not always readily available for antique motor vehicles manufactured prior to 1950.

West Virginia Legislation: Several bills introduced in 2015 failed to be approved by both houses of the legislature prior to the adjournment of the session. Among these were the following: A resolution to designate the second Friday in July as West Virginia Collector Car Appreciation Day was approved by the full House of Delegates but stalled in the Senate; a bill based on SEMA-model legislation that would have allowed owners to install and use aftermarket modified exhaust systems that meet a 95-decibel limit was not given committee consideration; legislation to allow roof-mounted off-road light bars to be uncovered when vehicles are operated on roads and highways was approved by the House Roads and Transportation Committee and referred to the House Judiciary Committee, where it did not receive committee consideration; a bill to make it a criminal offense to disturb the peace with “noise from an exhaust system” was not given committee consideration; and a measure to exempt all motor vehicles from personal property taxes also did not receive committee consideration.

FEDERAL UPDATE

Estate Taxes: The U.S. House Ways and Means Committee passed legislation on a straight party-line vote to repeal the estate tax. In 2012, lawmakers compromised on the current 40% tax rate with a $5 million-per-person exemption (indexed to inflation). It is unclear if there is enough support to repeal the tax, which now impacts an estimated 5,500 families, including many owners of small businesses. The bill will next be sent to the floor of the House for a vote by all members. 

Mon, 06/01/2015 - 11:36
SEMA News—June 2015

LEGISLATIVE AND TECHNICAL AFFAIRS
By Steve McDonald

Law and Order

STATE UPDATE

Arkansas Miles Traveled Tax: Legislation to allow the state to implement a pilot program that charged drivers based on vehicle miles traveled was withdrawn by the bill’s sponsor after a public outcry in Arkansas. Under the measure, participants in the program would have been taxed 1.5 cents per each mile the subject vehicle traveled on Arkansas roadways. The bill could have created privacy concerns and penalized national efforts to create a more fuel-efficient vehicle fleet by taxing drivers based on vehicle mileage.

Florida Miles Traveled Tax: A Florida House subcommittee approved amended legislation that originally directed the state to undertake a study on the impact of implementing a system that charges drivers based on vehicle miles traveled (VMT). Under the amendment, the entire program has been deleted from the bill. However, a Florida Senate version of the bill has been approved by the Senate Transportation Committee and is pending in the Regulated Industries Committee. The bill provides that the Center for Urban Transportation, in consultation with the Florida Transportation Commission, would establish a pilot program to study the feasibility of implementing a system that charges drivers based on VMT. As gas tax revenues decrease due to hybrid and electric vehicle ownership, states are looking for new sources of funding for pet projects. The Senate bill allows the Center for Urban Transportation to spend up to $400,000 for the study and pilot project design and provides for the implementation of the pilot program in 2017.

Hawaii Ethanol: Legislation to remove the requirement that gasoline offered for sale in the state contain a percentage of ethanol was approved by the Hawaii Senate and sent to the House with a significant amendment. Under the amended bill, the effective date of the repeal would be July 1, 2050. The original date for the repeal was July 1, 2015. This amendment renders the bill almost useless to the thousands of older cars that are currently most negatively affected by ethanol blends. The bill will now be considered by two additional House committees. Currently, the state requires that gasoline sold in the state for use in motor vehicles contain 10% ethanol by volume.

Iowa Single License Plate: Legislation that would provide for the issuance of a single rear-mounted license plate for motor vehicles was approved by the House Transportation Committee and will next be considered in a vote by the full Iowa House of Representatives. The bill would protect the aesthetic contours of certain vehicles and relieve vehicle owners of the burden and expense of having to create mounting holes on some original bumpers. The measure would also save money, conserve resources and bring Iowa in line with other states that are moving to a single-plate requirement.

Kentucky Property Tax: Legislation to put in place a new and more beneficial valuation procedure for older vehicles was signed into law by Governor Steve Beshear. Under the new law, vehicles 20 years old or older would no longer be presumed to be in “original factory” or “classic” condition for purposes of the property tax. Original factory and classic vehicles are currently assessed as high-value collectibles. This measure instead provides three options for assessing the value of these vehicles. Under each option, the value of the vehicle would be reduced by 10% each year.

Maine Ethanol: In 2013, SAN-supported legislation to prohibit the sale and distribution of corn-based ethanol in Maine was signed into law. Under the new law, 10 other states or a number of states with a collective population of 30,000,000 would have to enact a similar prohibition before the Maine law could go into effect. This year, legislation has been introduced to amend the law to provide that this prohibition would take effect if only three other states have enacted laws that prohibit the sale of motor fuel containing corn-based ethanol.

Maryland Historic Vehicles: SEMA is opposing legislation to increase the age requirement for vehicles eligible for registration as “historic motor vehicles.” Under a bill approved by the House of Delegates, the age requirement would be raised from 20 to at least 30 years old. The bill is now pending in the Senate Judicial Proceedings Committee. While the bill claims to address unsubstantiated claims of abuse, the Motor Vehicle Administration is already authorized by regulation to suspend the registration of any historic vehicle for use that is inconsistent with the registration requirements.

Maryland Single Plates: Amended House legislation to require the issuance of only a single license plate for historic vehicles and street rods was approved by the House of Delegates. The bill now moves to the Senate Judicial Proceedings Committee for consideration. Under the amendment, the single-plate option would be available only to owners of historic vehicles that are 60 years old and older. The bill no longer affords this option to street rods or later-model historics.

Nebraska Single License Plate: Legislation to provide for the issuance (for a $100 fee) of a single license plate for passenger cars that were not originally equipped with a bracket on the front of the vehicle to display a plate was approved by the Transportation and Telecommunications Committee. The bill will now be considered in a vote by all legislators. If enacted into law, the single-plate option would take effect on January 1, 2017.

Nevada Classic Vehicles: Legislation, opposed by SEMA, to drastically alter the requirements for vehicles eligible for registration as a “classic vehicle” was introduced. Under the bill, the special plates would be allowed only for passenger cars and require that owners provide proof satisfactory to the state that the vehicle is driven solely for personal use and not more than 5,000 miles during an annual registration period. The owner would also be required to have another passenger car or motorcycle registered during the entire registration period. The bill also would exclude light commercial vehicles from eligibility.

New Hampshire Antique Trucks: Legislation to include trucks more than 25 years old (regardless of weight) in the definition of eligible “antique motor vehicles” was approved by the House of Representatives and sent to the Senate Transportation Committee for consideration. The bill provides the option for older trucks to take advantage of the many accommodations available to antique motor vehicles.

New Mexico Replica Cars: A version of SEMA-model legislation to ease the process by which replica cars are titled and registered died when the legislature adjourned for the year. The bill had been approved by the full House of Representatives and was awaiting a vote by the full Senate. Among other things, the bill created a specific registration and titling class for replicas; provided that the model year is the year of the model or brand that a replica car most resembles; exempted replica cars from state and local laws or ordinances requiring periodic vehicle or vehicle-emissions inspections and testing; and provided that replica cars need not have equipment that was not required by state or federal law in its model year.

North Dakota Vehicle Modifications: A bill that originally sought to increase the population of vehicles prohibited from modifying the manufacturer’s original suspension, steering or brake system was amended and approved by the House of Representatives. The bill has been sent to the Senate for concurrence with the amendments. Under the amendment, the bill would no longer restrict modifications on vehicles weighing between 7,000 and 10,000 lbs.

Tennessee Emissions: Amended legislation to extend the emissions-inspection exemption for new cars was approved by the House Government Operations Committee. Under the original bill, vehicles that are three years old and newer and that have an odometer reading of less than 36,000 miles would be excused from the emissions test. Under the newly amended bill, all vehicles three years old and newer would be excused regardless of mileage. Current law exempts only new motor vehicles being registered for the first time or one year from initial registration.

Texas Ethanol: Legislation to prohibit the sale of motor fuel with an ethanol mixture was introduced in the Texas House of Representatives. The measure recognizes that ethanol fuels cause problems with fuel pumps and fuel gauges as well as other engine performance issues, especially over a period of time when the vehicle is not used.

Virginia Exhaust: Governor Terry McAuliffe signed into law legislation to exempt certain antique motor vehicles from the requirement that they have exhaust systems of a type installed as standard factory equipment or comparable to that designed as factory equipment. The new law, which SEMA supported, provides this exemption only to antique vehicles manufactured prior to 1950 and containing engines comparable to those designed as standard factory equipment for use on those vehicles. The new law recognizes that factory replacement parts or comparables are not always readily available for antique motor vehicles manufactured prior to 1950.

West Virginia Legislation: Several bills introduced in 2015 failed to be approved by both houses of the legislature prior to the adjournment of the session. Among these were the following: A resolution to designate the second Friday in July as West Virginia Collector Car Appreciation Day was approved by the full House of Delegates but stalled in the Senate; a bill based on SEMA-model legislation that would have allowed owners to install and use aftermarket modified exhaust systems that meet a 95-decibel limit was not given committee consideration; legislation to allow roof-mounted off-road light bars to be uncovered when vehicles are operated on roads and highways was approved by the House Roads and Transportation Committee and referred to the House Judiciary Committee, where it did not receive committee consideration; a bill to make it a criminal offense to disturb the peace with “noise from an exhaust system” was not given committee consideration; and a measure to exempt all motor vehicles from personal property taxes also did not receive committee consideration.

FEDERAL UPDATE

Estate Taxes: The U.S. House Ways and Means Committee passed legislation on a straight party-line vote to repeal the estate tax. In 2012, lawmakers compromised on the current 40% tax rate with a $5 million-per-person exemption (indexed to inflation). It is unclear if there is enough support to repeal the tax, which now impacts an estimated 5,500 families, including many owners of small businesses. The bill will next be sent to the floor of the House for a vote by all members. 

Mon, 06/01/2015 - 11:17
SEMA News—June 2015

MOBILE ELECTRONICS & ACCESSORIES NEW PRODUCTS

Mobile-Electronics Products

Powerful Accessories That Boost Vehicle Efficiency and Functionality

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsNew products in the mobile-electronics category at the 2014 SEMA Show ran the gamut from high-powered horns to connected-car and navigation aids. Each year, the electronics displays become more advanced and provide potential for increased revenue at specialty-equipment retail outlets. The latest offerings featured traditional automotive audio and video systems but also included interfaces for smartphones and tablets as well as vehicle maintenance technologies. The following pages contain dozens of components, systems and accessories from the 2014 New Products Showcase. Virtually every SEMA-member business, regardless of niche or segment, will almost certainly find a product listed that will enhance its operational efficiency or bring customers through the doors.

VIEW ALL MOBILE ELECTRONIC NEW PRODUCTS FROM THE 2014 SEMA SHOW NEW PRODUCT SHOWCASE

Palmer Performance Engineering
DashCommand
801-709-6300
www.dashcommand.com
PN: DASHCMD

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsDashCommand is an app for cars and trucks. It turns an iOS or Android smartphone or tablet into an advanced display for engine data. Monitor fuel economy. Add custom gauges and graphs. Calculates 0–60 time, quarter-mile times, horsepower, torque and much more. Also use DashCommand directly on many in-dash radio head units.

Palmer Performance Engineering
DashLogic Display Controller
801-709-6300
www.dashlogic.com
PN: DL1020U

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsPalmer Performance Engineering says that DashLogic is the most advanced gauge system to date. Customize a factory instrument-cluster display or heads-up display. DashLogic is plug and play—no tuning or installation required. Just plug it into the OBD-II port. View horsepower, torque, knock, air/fuel ratio, oil temp, boost, 0–60 time and much more right on the factory dash.

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsPilot Automotive
OBD II Bluetooth Reader
626-937-6988

www.pilotautomotive.com
PN: OBD-1001

Immediately diagnose a check-engine light via an Android device. Monitor real-time engine performance.

Log, analyze and export data. Diagnose, check/reset trouble codes. Works on all OBD II-compliant vehicles.

Ozmo Engineering
Twin Throttle-Body Controller
408-658-2244
www.ozmoengineering.com
PN: OZ-TTB-04

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsOzmo throttle-body controllers will drive a single or multiple drive-by-wire (DBW) throttle bodies from a foot-pedal input. Ideal for converting cable throttle bodies to DBW. Controllers can also be used with OEM ECUs to add additional throttle bodies for custom intake manifolds. Fully programmable throttle-body opening rates with temp, A/C and rpm inputs.

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsZeitronix
ECA-2 Ethanol Content Analyzer With E% Hacker Display
310-328-1234
www.zeitronix.com
PN: ECA-2+HTR

High-performance, real-time ethanol content analyzer used to detect ethanol in petrol
for concentrations from 0%–100%.

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsAuto-i (Canada) Corp.
OE-Fit Third Brake Light Camera
416-727-8699
www.auto-i.com
PN: Pro CAM,

SprinterCAM
OE-fit third-brake-light camera for commercial vans, including the Sprinter, ProMaster, Fiat, Nissan NV, Ford Transit, GM Express and commercial box vans. All products approved by CE, FCC, E-mark, DOT and SAE.

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsPanaVise
ActionGrip 3-N-1 Suction-Cup Camera Mount Kit
775-850-2900
www.panavise.com
PN: 13150

As the name implies, the ActionGrip 3-N-1 suction-cup camera mount kit allows the
user to assemble one of three action
camera mounts, quickly and easily.
Position the camera exactly where desired
and get the perfect camera angle to capture
the action during a shoot.

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsOracle Lighting
ColorShift Factory DRL Circuit-Board Upgrade for C7 Corvette
800-407-5776
www.oraclelights.com
PN: 2624-333

Now available for most late-model GM vehicles, this DRL circuit-board replacement takes the factory lighting from mild to wild. Replacing the factory DRL with the Oracle ColorShift unit allows the user to select a variety of colors and patterns for car shows, motorsports or any other off-road activity. Includes wireless controller for selecting color.

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsXS Power Batteries
D3400R AGM Battery
800-4XS-POWER
www.4xspower.com
PN: D3400R

New for 2015 is the D3400R, a reversed-polarity version of XS Power Batteries’ most popular 12V battery, the D3400. The option to have this group size available with reversed polarity allows fitment for many more vehicle applications. With 1,000 CA and 65 Ah of capacity, this battery has enough energy density to power the most demanding performance vehicles.

Brandon Distributing Inc.
Smart Line Cruise Controls
763-241-4172

www.brandondist.com
PN: AP900C

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsHas a programmable module for multiple ETC vehicle application installations in CAN bus or analog mode. Learns pedals parameters and has on-board diagnostics.

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsBeanco Tech
Mobile Home 12V Edition
972-215-7300
www.beancotech.com
PN: M01-002-001

Aftermarket Siri Eyes-Free. Mobile Home 12V edition allows professional installers to add Siri Eyes-Free to vehicles with existing Bluetooth hands-free systems. Text, post, tweet and so much more using just the voice.

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsBrimtech Self-Filling Windshield Washer Systems
Automated Self-Filling Windshield Washer System
866-274-6832
www.brimtech.com
PN: 969-0000-041

This extremely eco-friendly, self-filling windshield-washer system collects the condensate water that drips from the vehicle’s air conditioner and automatically recycles it into high-quality washing fluid, then delivers it into the washer reservoir, keeping the reservoir fully topped off while driving with the AC turned on.

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsAAMP of America
Intraphex GM Blind-Spot
Elimination Interface
810-397-1772
www.intraphex.com
PN: P1C-GM12

Eliminate blind spots with Prodigy-series GM camera interfaces. Upgrade the factory monitor to display right-, left-, front- and rear-view cameras, triggered from the CAN BUS of the vehicle. Designed for all new GM 4.2-in. and 8-in. infotainment systems. Additional features include dynamic parking lines for the rear camera and plug-and-play harness.

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsRostra Precision Controls
’14+ Toyota Tundra LED
DRL System
800-782-3379

www.rostra.com
PN: 260-1030-TUNS

A 3-watt LED daytime running light system available with painted bezels that match OE Toyota paint colors or unpainted for vehicles with custom stylization and graphics.

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsWhistler
The MotoGlo Half Helmet
Safety Light
479-464-3558

www.whistlergroup.com
PN: WHL-40

The MotoGlo is a sleek helmet safety light that easily attaches to any half- or full-face helmet to increase rider visibility while on the road. It features helmet-height running, braking and turn-signal LED lighting that provides increased rider visibility to following drivers.

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsEscort Inc.
Passport Max2
888-326-4226

www.escortradar.com

Escort says that the Passport Max2 is the new standard in ticket protection, providing ultimate range and accuracy and enabling the user to drive worry-free. Max2 has built-in Bluetooth technology, providing easy access to Escort’s award-winning mobile app, Escort Live. The ticket-protection network provides instant alerts for real-time speed traps reported by other drivers.

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsKICKER
PSM3 Mini-Enclosed
Speaker System
405-624-8510
www.kicker.com
PN: PSM3

Weather-resistant little speakers mount directly onto any ride with handlebars, directing quality sound right to the ears. It consists of a full-range, 3-in. driver pair enclosed in durable, high-quality chrome plating. A handlebar clamp attached to the enclosure resists vibrations and locks onto handlebars with single-point mounting.

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsReikken
HO3809
419-386-8115

www.reikken.com
PN: HO3809

The Reikken HO3809 is designed for the most demanding systems. It is a pure lead, hydro-formed-plate and fire-retardant-case Group 31 power cell that weighs 70 lbs. The 3809 is 12 volts and 120 amp hours,
and its continuous wattage is 3,800 watts.

Scosche
Amplifier Power Wiring Kit
805-486-4450

www.scosche.com
PN: EFXAKC4

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsA 4AWG Amplifier Power Wiring Kit with ultra-flex, fine-strand, oxygen-free copper power/ground cable, high-current mini-ANL fuse block and ultimate ground terminal.

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsCybcar America
Premium Tech Package Integration for Toyota
888-68-66227
www.cybcar.us
PN: MUTECHPCK

Navigation, motion object detection system, BSD, DVR and much more. Fully integrated add-on navigation system to OEM display. Made with convenient features such as driving safety system, motion detection system, audio system and much more.

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsMito Corp.
50-GENK85A
800-433-6486

www.mito-auto.com
PN: 50-GENK85A

New frameless mirrors by Gentex incorporate smooth lines in a thin body, offering a beautiful complement to 21st century automotive design. Available with features such as auto dimming, compass and the new HomeLink version 5 that offers two-way communication with a compatible garage door opener. A true centerpiece to any vehicle’s interior.

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsRam Mounting Systems
X-Grip Suction Cup Mount
for iPhone 6
206-763-8361

www.rammount.com
PN: RAM-B-166-UN7U

The RAM-B-166-UN7U consists of a 3.25-in., twist-lock, suction-cup base, double-socket system and universal spring-loaded X-Grip holder for cell phones. The suction-cup, twist-lock base is designed to have a strong hold on glass and non-porous plastic surfaces, including Ram adhesive disks.

Steelmate Co. Ltd.
TPMS for Motorcycle

www.steel-mate.com
PN: TP-90

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsMonitoring the vital balance for a motorcycle.

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsBrandmotion
FreedomCharge Qi Wireless
Charging Installer Kit
734-619-1250
www.brandmotion.com
PN: FDMC-1210

FreedomCharge uses wireless charging standard Qi to keep a phone going without the hassle of plugging it in. It uses inductive charging technology to allow a smartphone to charge wirelessly. This installer kit is fully customizable and can be easily cut to the exact dimensions needed, making it a universal product.

VIEW ALL MOBILE ELECTRONIC NEW PRODUCTS FROM THE 2014 SEMA SHOW NEW PRODUCT SHOWCASE

Mon, 06/01/2015 - 11:17
SEMA News—June 2015

MOBILE ELECTRONICS & ACCESSORIES NEW PRODUCTS

Mobile-Electronics Products

Powerful Accessories That Boost Vehicle Efficiency and Functionality

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsNew products in the mobile-electronics category at the 2014 SEMA Show ran the gamut from high-powered horns to connected-car and navigation aids. Each year, the electronics displays become more advanced and provide potential for increased revenue at specialty-equipment retail outlets. The latest offerings featured traditional automotive audio and video systems but also included interfaces for smartphones and tablets as well as vehicle maintenance technologies. The following pages contain dozens of components, systems and accessories from the 2014 New Products Showcase. Virtually every SEMA-member business, regardless of niche or segment, will almost certainly find a product listed that will enhance its operational efficiency or bring customers through the doors.

VIEW ALL MOBILE ELECTRONIC NEW PRODUCTS FROM THE 2014 SEMA SHOW NEW PRODUCT SHOWCASE

Palmer Performance Engineering
DashCommand
801-709-6300
www.dashcommand.com
PN: DASHCMD

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsDashCommand is an app for cars and trucks. It turns an iOS or Android smartphone or tablet into an advanced display for engine data. Monitor fuel economy. Add custom gauges and graphs. Calculates 0–60 time, quarter-mile times, horsepower, torque and much more. Also use DashCommand directly on many in-dash radio head units.

Palmer Performance Engineering
DashLogic Display Controller
801-709-6300
www.dashlogic.com
PN: DL1020U

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsPalmer Performance Engineering says that DashLogic is the most advanced gauge system to date. Customize a factory instrument-cluster display or heads-up display. DashLogic is plug and play—no tuning or installation required. Just plug it into the OBD-II port. View horsepower, torque, knock, air/fuel ratio, oil temp, boost, 0–60 time and much more right on the factory dash.

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsPilot Automotive
OBD II Bluetooth Reader
626-937-6988

www.pilotautomotive.com
PN: OBD-1001

Immediately diagnose a check-engine light via an Android device. Monitor real-time engine performance.

Log, analyze and export data. Diagnose, check/reset trouble codes. Works on all OBD II-compliant vehicles.

Ozmo Engineering
Twin Throttle-Body Controller
408-658-2244
www.ozmoengineering.com
PN: OZ-TTB-04

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsOzmo throttle-body controllers will drive a single or multiple drive-by-wire (DBW) throttle bodies from a foot-pedal input. Ideal for converting cable throttle bodies to DBW. Controllers can also be used with OEM ECUs to add additional throttle bodies for custom intake manifolds. Fully programmable throttle-body opening rates with temp, A/C and rpm inputs.

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsZeitronix
ECA-2 Ethanol Content Analyzer With E% Hacker Display
310-328-1234
www.zeitronix.com
PN: ECA-2+HTR

High-performance, real-time ethanol content analyzer used to detect ethanol in petrol
for concentrations from 0%–100%.

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsAuto-i (Canada) Corp.
OE-Fit Third Brake Light Camera
416-727-8699
www.auto-i.com
PN: Pro CAM,

SprinterCAM
OE-fit third-brake-light camera for commercial vans, including the Sprinter, ProMaster, Fiat, Nissan NV, Ford Transit, GM Express and commercial box vans. All products approved by CE, FCC, E-mark, DOT and SAE.

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsPanaVise
ActionGrip 3-N-1 Suction-Cup Camera Mount Kit
775-850-2900
www.panavise.com
PN: 13150

As the name implies, the ActionGrip 3-N-1 suction-cup camera mount kit allows the
user to assemble one of three action
camera mounts, quickly and easily.
Position the camera exactly where desired
and get the perfect camera angle to capture
the action during a shoot.

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsOracle Lighting
ColorShift Factory DRL Circuit-Board Upgrade for C7 Corvette
800-407-5776
www.oraclelights.com
PN: 2624-333

Now available for most late-model GM vehicles, this DRL circuit-board replacement takes the factory lighting from mild to wild. Replacing the factory DRL with the Oracle ColorShift unit allows the user to select a variety of colors and patterns for car shows, motorsports or any other off-road activity. Includes wireless controller for selecting color.

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsXS Power Batteries
D3400R AGM Battery
800-4XS-POWER
www.4xspower.com
PN: D3400R

New for 2015 is the D3400R, a reversed-polarity version of XS Power Batteries’ most popular 12V battery, the D3400. The option to have this group size available with reversed polarity allows fitment for many more vehicle applications. With 1,000 CA and 65 Ah of capacity, this battery has enough energy density to power the most demanding performance vehicles.

Brandon Distributing Inc.
Smart Line Cruise Controls
763-241-4172

www.brandondist.com
PN: AP900C

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsHas a programmable module for multiple ETC vehicle application installations in CAN bus or analog mode. Learns pedals parameters and has on-board diagnostics.

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsBeanco Tech
Mobile Home 12V Edition
972-215-7300
www.beancotech.com
PN: M01-002-001

Aftermarket Siri Eyes-Free. Mobile Home 12V edition allows professional installers to add Siri Eyes-Free to vehicles with existing Bluetooth hands-free systems. Text, post, tweet and so much more using just the voice.

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsBrimtech Self-Filling Windshield Washer Systems
Automated Self-Filling Windshield Washer System
866-274-6832
www.brimtech.com
PN: 969-0000-041

This extremely eco-friendly, self-filling windshield-washer system collects the condensate water that drips from the vehicle’s air conditioner and automatically recycles it into high-quality washing fluid, then delivers it into the washer reservoir, keeping the reservoir fully topped off while driving with the AC turned on.

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsAAMP of America
Intraphex GM Blind-Spot
Elimination Interface
810-397-1772
www.intraphex.com
PN: P1C-GM12

Eliminate blind spots with Prodigy-series GM camera interfaces. Upgrade the factory monitor to display right-, left-, front- and rear-view cameras, triggered from the CAN BUS of the vehicle. Designed for all new GM 4.2-in. and 8-in. infotainment systems. Additional features include dynamic parking lines for the rear camera and plug-and-play harness.

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsRostra Precision Controls
’14+ Toyota Tundra LED
DRL System
800-782-3379

www.rostra.com
PN: 260-1030-TUNS

A 3-watt LED daytime running light system available with painted bezels that match OE Toyota paint colors or unpainted for vehicles with custom stylization and graphics.

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsWhistler
The MotoGlo Half Helmet
Safety Light
479-464-3558

www.whistlergroup.com
PN: WHL-40

The MotoGlo is a sleek helmet safety light that easily attaches to any half- or full-face helmet to increase rider visibility while on the road. It features helmet-height running, braking and turn-signal LED lighting that provides increased rider visibility to following drivers.

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsEscort Inc.
Passport Max2
888-326-4226

www.escortradar.com

Escort says that the Passport Max2 is the new standard in ticket protection, providing ultimate range and accuracy and enabling the user to drive worry-free. Max2 has built-in Bluetooth technology, providing easy access to Escort’s award-winning mobile app, Escort Live. The ticket-protection network provides instant alerts for real-time speed traps reported by other drivers.

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsKICKER
PSM3 Mini-Enclosed
Speaker System
405-624-8510
www.kicker.com
PN: PSM3

Weather-resistant little speakers mount directly onto any ride with handlebars, directing quality sound right to the ears. It consists of a full-range, 3-in. driver pair enclosed in durable, high-quality chrome plating. A handlebar clamp attached to the enclosure resists vibrations and locks onto handlebars with single-point mounting.

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsReikken
HO3809
419-386-8115

www.reikken.com
PN: HO3809

The Reikken HO3809 is designed for the most demanding systems. It is a pure lead, hydro-formed-plate and fire-retardant-case Group 31 power cell that weighs 70 lbs. The 3809 is 12 volts and 120 amp hours,
and its continuous wattage is 3,800 watts.

Scosche
Amplifier Power Wiring Kit
805-486-4450

www.scosche.com
PN: EFXAKC4

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsA 4AWG Amplifier Power Wiring Kit with ultra-flex, fine-strand, oxygen-free copper power/ground cable, high-current mini-ANL fuse block and ultimate ground terminal.

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsCybcar America
Premium Tech Package Integration for Toyota
888-68-66227
www.cybcar.us
PN: MUTECHPCK

Navigation, motion object detection system, BSD, DVR and much more. Fully integrated add-on navigation system to OEM display. Made with convenient features such as driving safety system, motion detection system, audio system and much more.

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsMito Corp.
50-GENK85A
800-433-6486

www.mito-auto.com
PN: 50-GENK85A

New frameless mirrors by Gentex incorporate smooth lines in a thin body, offering a beautiful complement to 21st century automotive design. Available with features such as auto dimming, compass and the new HomeLink version 5 that offers two-way communication with a compatible garage door opener. A true centerpiece to any vehicle’s interior.

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsRam Mounting Systems
X-Grip Suction Cup Mount
for iPhone 6
206-763-8361

www.rammount.com
PN: RAM-B-166-UN7U

The RAM-B-166-UN7U consists of a 3.25-in., twist-lock, suction-cup base, double-socket system and universal spring-loaded X-Grip holder for cell phones. The suction-cup, twist-lock base is designed to have a strong hold on glass and non-porous plastic surfaces, including Ram adhesive disks.

Steelmate Co. Ltd.
TPMS for Motorcycle

www.steel-mate.com
PN: TP-90

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsMonitoring the vital balance for a motorcycle.

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsBrandmotion
FreedomCharge Qi Wireless
Charging Installer Kit
734-619-1250
www.brandmotion.com
PN: FDMC-1210

FreedomCharge uses wireless charging standard Qi to keep a phone going without the hassle of plugging it in. It uses inductive charging technology to allow a smartphone to charge wirelessly. This installer kit is fully customizable and can be easily cut to the exact dimensions needed, making it a universal product.

VIEW ALL MOBILE ELECTRONIC NEW PRODUCTS FROM THE 2014 SEMA SHOW NEW PRODUCT SHOWCASE

Mon, 06/01/2015 - 11:17
SEMA News—June 2015

MOBILE ELECTRONICS & ACCESSORIES NEW PRODUCTS

Mobile-Electronics Products

Powerful Accessories That Boost Vehicle Efficiency and Functionality

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsNew products in the mobile-electronics category at the 2014 SEMA Show ran the gamut from high-powered horns to connected-car and navigation aids. Each year, the electronics displays become more advanced and provide potential for increased revenue at specialty-equipment retail outlets. The latest offerings featured traditional automotive audio and video systems but also included interfaces for smartphones and tablets as well as vehicle maintenance technologies. The following pages contain dozens of components, systems and accessories from the 2014 New Products Showcase. Virtually every SEMA-member business, regardless of niche or segment, will almost certainly find a product listed that will enhance its operational efficiency or bring customers through the doors.

VIEW ALL MOBILE ELECTRONIC NEW PRODUCTS FROM THE 2014 SEMA SHOW NEW PRODUCT SHOWCASE

Palmer Performance Engineering
DashCommand
801-709-6300
www.dashcommand.com
PN: DASHCMD

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsDashCommand is an app for cars and trucks. It turns an iOS or Android smartphone or tablet into an advanced display for engine data. Monitor fuel economy. Add custom gauges and graphs. Calculates 0–60 time, quarter-mile times, horsepower, torque and much more. Also use DashCommand directly on many in-dash radio head units.

Palmer Performance Engineering
DashLogic Display Controller
801-709-6300
www.dashlogic.com
PN: DL1020U

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsPalmer Performance Engineering says that DashLogic is the most advanced gauge system to date. Customize a factory instrument-cluster display or heads-up display. DashLogic is plug and play—no tuning or installation required. Just plug it into the OBD-II port. View horsepower, torque, knock, air/fuel ratio, oil temp, boost, 0–60 time and much more right on the factory dash.

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsPilot Automotive
OBD II Bluetooth Reader
626-937-6988

www.pilotautomotive.com
PN: OBD-1001

Immediately diagnose a check-engine light via an Android device. Monitor real-time engine performance.

Log, analyze and export data. Diagnose, check/reset trouble codes. Works on all OBD II-compliant vehicles.

Ozmo Engineering
Twin Throttle-Body Controller
408-658-2244
www.ozmoengineering.com
PN: OZ-TTB-04

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsOzmo throttle-body controllers will drive a single or multiple drive-by-wire (DBW) throttle bodies from a foot-pedal input. Ideal for converting cable throttle bodies to DBW. Controllers can also be used with OEM ECUs to add additional throttle bodies for custom intake manifolds. Fully programmable throttle-body opening rates with temp, A/C and rpm inputs.

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsZeitronix
ECA-2 Ethanol Content Analyzer With E% Hacker Display
310-328-1234
www.zeitronix.com
PN: ECA-2+HTR

High-performance, real-time ethanol content analyzer used to detect ethanol in petrol
for concentrations from 0%–100%.

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsAuto-i (Canada) Corp.
OE-Fit Third Brake Light Camera
416-727-8699
www.auto-i.com
PN: Pro CAM,

SprinterCAM
OE-fit third-brake-light camera for commercial vans, including the Sprinter, ProMaster, Fiat, Nissan NV, Ford Transit, GM Express and commercial box vans. All products approved by CE, FCC, E-mark, DOT and SAE.

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsPanaVise
ActionGrip 3-N-1 Suction-Cup Camera Mount Kit
775-850-2900
www.panavise.com
PN: 13150

As the name implies, the ActionGrip 3-N-1 suction-cup camera mount kit allows the
user to assemble one of three action
camera mounts, quickly and easily.
Position the camera exactly where desired
and get the perfect camera angle to capture
the action during a shoot.

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsOracle Lighting
ColorShift Factory DRL Circuit-Board Upgrade for C7 Corvette
800-407-5776
www.oraclelights.com
PN: 2624-333

Now available for most late-model GM vehicles, this DRL circuit-board replacement takes the factory lighting from mild to wild. Replacing the factory DRL with the Oracle ColorShift unit allows the user to select a variety of colors and patterns for car shows, motorsports or any other off-road activity. Includes wireless controller for selecting color.

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsXS Power Batteries
D3400R AGM Battery
800-4XS-POWER
www.4xspower.com
PN: D3400R

New for 2015 is the D3400R, a reversed-polarity version of XS Power Batteries’ most popular 12V battery, the D3400. The option to have this group size available with reversed polarity allows fitment for many more vehicle applications. With 1,000 CA and 65 Ah of capacity, this battery has enough energy density to power the most demanding performance vehicles.

Brandon Distributing Inc.
Smart Line Cruise Controls
763-241-4172

www.brandondist.com
PN: AP900C

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsHas a programmable module for multiple ETC vehicle application installations in CAN bus or analog mode. Learns pedals parameters and has on-board diagnostics.

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsBeanco Tech
Mobile Home 12V Edition
972-215-7300
www.beancotech.com
PN: M01-002-001

Aftermarket Siri Eyes-Free. Mobile Home 12V edition allows professional installers to add Siri Eyes-Free to vehicles with existing Bluetooth hands-free systems. Text, post, tweet and so much more using just the voice.

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsBrimtech Self-Filling Windshield Washer Systems
Automated Self-Filling Windshield Washer System
866-274-6832
www.brimtech.com
PN: 969-0000-041

This extremely eco-friendly, self-filling windshield-washer system collects the condensate water that drips from the vehicle’s air conditioner and automatically recycles it into high-quality washing fluid, then delivers it into the washer reservoir, keeping the reservoir fully topped off while driving with the AC turned on.

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsAAMP of America
Intraphex GM Blind-Spot
Elimination Interface
810-397-1772
www.intraphex.com
PN: P1C-GM12

Eliminate blind spots with Prodigy-series GM camera interfaces. Upgrade the factory monitor to display right-, left-, front- and rear-view cameras, triggered from the CAN BUS of the vehicle. Designed for all new GM 4.2-in. and 8-in. infotainment systems. Additional features include dynamic parking lines for the rear camera and plug-and-play harness.

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsRostra Precision Controls
’14+ Toyota Tundra LED
DRL System
800-782-3379

www.rostra.com
PN: 260-1030-TUNS

A 3-watt LED daytime running light system available with painted bezels that match OE Toyota paint colors or unpainted for vehicles with custom stylization and graphics.

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsWhistler
The MotoGlo Half Helmet
Safety Light
479-464-3558

www.whistlergroup.com
PN: WHL-40

The MotoGlo is a sleek helmet safety light that easily attaches to any half- or full-face helmet to increase rider visibility while on the road. It features helmet-height running, braking and turn-signal LED lighting that provides increased rider visibility to following drivers.

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsEscort Inc.
Passport Max2
888-326-4226

www.escortradar.com

Escort says that the Passport Max2 is the new standard in ticket protection, providing ultimate range and accuracy and enabling the user to drive worry-free. Max2 has built-in Bluetooth technology, providing easy access to Escort’s award-winning mobile app, Escort Live. The ticket-protection network provides instant alerts for real-time speed traps reported by other drivers.

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsKICKER
PSM3 Mini-Enclosed
Speaker System
405-624-8510
www.kicker.com
PN: PSM3

Weather-resistant little speakers mount directly onto any ride with handlebars, directing quality sound right to the ears. It consists of a full-range, 3-in. driver pair enclosed in durable, high-quality chrome plating. A handlebar clamp attached to the enclosure resists vibrations and locks onto handlebars with single-point mounting.

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsReikken
HO3809
419-386-8115

www.reikken.com
PN: HO3809

The Reikken HO3809 is designed for the most demanding systems. It is a pure lead, hydro-formed-plate and fire-retardant-case Group 31 power cell that weighs 70 lbs. The 3809 is 12 volts and 120 amp hours,
and its continuous wattage is 3,800 watts.

Scosche
Amplifier Power Wiring Kit
805-486-4450

www.scosche.com
PN: EFXAKC4

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsA 4AWG Amplifier Power Wiring Kit with ultra-flex, fine-strand, oxygen-free copper power/ground cable, high-current mini-ANL fuse block and ultimate ground terminal.

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsCybcar America
Premium Tech Package Integration for Toyota
888-68-66227
www.cybcar.us
PN: MUTECHPCK

Navigation, motion object detection system, BSD, DVR and much more. Fully integrated add-on navigation system to OEM display. Made with convenient features such as driving safety system, motion detection system, audio system and much more.

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsMito Corp.
50-GENK85A
800-433-6486

www.mito-auto.com
PN: 50-GENK85A

New frameless mirrors by Gentex incorporate smooth lines in a thin body, offering a beautiful complement to 21st century automotive design. Available with features such as auto dimming, compass and the new HomeLink version 5 that offers two-way communication with a compatible garage door opener. A true centerpiece to any vehicle’s interior.

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsRam Mounting Systems
X-Grip Suction Cup Mount
for iPhone 6
206-763-8361

www.rammount.com
PN: RAM-B-166-UN7U

The RAM-B-166-UN7U consists of a 3.25-in., twist-lock, suction-cup base, double-socket system and universal spring-loaded X-Grip holder for cell phones. The suction-cup, twist-lock base is designed to have a strong hold on glass and non-porous plastic surfaces, including Ram adhesive disks.

Steelmate Co. Ltd.
TPMS for Motorcycle

www.steel-mate.com
PN: TP-90

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsMonitoring the vital balance for a motorcycle.

Aftermarket Business, Car Audio Installers,Car Stereo Retailers, Connected Vehicle, New Products, Mobile ElectronicsBrandmotion
FreedomCharge Qi Wireless
Charging Installer Kit
734-619-1250
www.brandmotion.com
PN: FDMC-1210

FreedomCharge uses wireless charging standard Qi to keep a phone going without the hassle of plugging it in. It uses inductive charging technology to allow a smartphone to charge wirelessly. This installer kit is fully customizable and can be easily cut to the exact dimensions needed, making it a universal product.

VIEW ALL MOBILE ELECTRONIC NEW PRODUCTS FROM THE 2014 SEMA SHOW NEW PRODUCT SHOWCASE