Yea, Patrik is right in eastern europe. In Lithuania for example, if you want to mod your car and make it 20 percent more powerful than stock model, you have to get racing passport for your car, but you can still drive it on public roads with one condition: you’d have to install a roll cage.
But the biggest flaw in this passport regulation is that Lithuania doesn’t have an official dyno stand, (sure private companies do have them, but their dyno test results are “unofficial”) therefore nobody bothers to take out racing passport for their car and tunes them however they want, since there’s no way to officially tell if a car is 20 percent more powerful than stock model.
You might ask why not take out that racing passport and do everything legally? The answer is simple - that passport is bloody expensive (in most of the cases it’s more expensive than the car itself).
i’m going to guess here in the U.S. depending on which state/city you live in…. around where i live nobody messes with you , i don’t know of any restrictions except maybe a limit on a lift for a truck but i think it would have to be ridiculous , like no longer functioning on city streets lol
you should watch MCM, New Zeland mate. A bike on the back of a mini is legal :D
AVOID PORTUGAL STRICTEST CAR RULES EVER! Can’t even take logos out or change the pedals and they test every thing every year( safety tests, power tests, emmisions tests, interior checks spare tire checks … well everything!
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Czech republic…eastern europe in general
Yea, Patrik is right in eastern europe. In Lithuania for example, if you want to mod your car and make it 20 percent more powerful than stock model, you have to get racing passport for your car, but you can still drive it on public roads with one condition: you’d have to install a roll cage.
But the biggest flaw in this passport regulation is that Lithuania doesn’t have an official dyno stand, (sure private companies do have them, but their dyno test results are “unofficial”) therefore nobody bothers to take out racing passport for their car and tunes them however they want, since there’s no way to officially tell if a car is 20 percent more powerful than stock model.
You might ask why not take out that racing passport and do everything legally? The answer is simple - that passport is bloody expensive (in most of the cases it’s more expensive than the car itself).
i’m going to guess here in the U.S. depending on which state/city you live in…. around where i live nobody messes with you , i don’t know of any restrictions except maybe a limit on a lift for a truck but i think it would have to be ridiculous , like no longer functioning on city streets lol
you should watch MCM, New Zeland mate. A bike on the back of a mini is legal :D
AVOID PORTUGAL STRICTEST CAR RULES EVER! Can’t even take logos out or change the pedals and they test every thing every year( safety tests, power tests, emmisions tests, interior checks spare tire checks … well everything!