[AT] Ram 3.0 liter Dieselgate

David Bruce tractor57 at gmail.com
Sat Jan 14 10:05:22 PST 2017


In my experience once a goal is reached there has to be another goal. 
For the most part the limits set now are well beyond a proven effect 
(not always but many). On the dieselgate thing I see an issue that is 
related to circumventing the limits that were set. I suspect as time 
goes by we will see most automobile diesel engines were in the same 
category. I think a valid point to discuss the right or wrong of the 
regs. I do not support evading the regs.

I remember when I first went to work in the textile industry the mantra 
was "the solution to pollution is dilution". I get that to a point but I 
also saw a number of finishing plant workers die of cancers that were 
most likely related to exposure to toxic materials.

Hopefully things have progressed reasonably but I suspect in many areas 
they have not.

David

NW NC


On 1/14/2017 12:39 PM, Cecil Bearden wrote:
> This is the way of overreaching government bureaucracies.  I spent 30
> years with the Oklahoma regulatory water agency.    There were many
> times that some of the staff would make new rules that would cost a
> landowner a bunle of money and not really do any thing to help, just
> give the staff something to do.  I would voice my opinion as a landowner
> and a water right holder.  The answer I received was "that's just the
> cost of doing business".   Many years ago, in the analog instrumentation
> era, the allowable for many pollutants was detectable""  now, nearly
> everything is detectable, but they do not know what  is allowable or not
> a problem.....
>
> Cecil in OKla


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