Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards; Occupant Crash Protection, 66786-66802 [E8-26812]
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Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 219 / Wednesday, November 12, 2008 / Rules and Regulations
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[FR Doc. E8–26875 Filed 11–10–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–S
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration
49 CFR Parts 571 and 585
[Docket No. NHTSA–08–0168]
RIN 2127–AK02
Federal Motor Vehicle Safety
Standards; Occupant Crash Protection
National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration (NHTSA),
Department of Transportation (DOT).
ACTION: Final rule.
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AGENCY:
SUMMARY: NHTSA is amending Federal
Motor Vehicle Safety Standard (FMVSS)
No. 208, ‘‘Occupant crash protection,’’
to update many of the child restraint
systems (CRSs) listed in Appendix A of
the standard. The CRSs in Appendix A
are used by NHTSA to test advanced air
bag suppression or low risk deployment
systems, to ensure that the air bag
systems pose no reasonable safety risk
to infants and small children in the real
world. The amendments replace the
CRSs listed in Appendix A with CRSs
that are more available and more
representative of the CRS fleet currently
on the market.
DATES: If you wish to petition for
reconsideration of this rule, your
petition must be received by December
29, 2008.
Effective date: The date on which this
final rule amends the CFR is January 12,
2009.
This final rule adopts a one-year
phase-in of the requirement to test with
the child restraints in the revised
Appendix A. Under the phase-in, 50
percent of vehicles manufactured on or
after September 1, 2009 must be
certified as meeting FMVSS No. 208
when tested with the CRSs on the
revised Appendix A, and all vehicles
manufactured on or after September 1,
2010 must be so certified.
ADDRESSES: If you wish to petition for
reconsideration of this rule, you should
refer in your petition to the docket
number of this document and submit
your petition to: Administrator,
National Highway Traffic Safety
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Administration, 1200 New Jersey
Avenue, SE., West Building,
Washington, DC 20590.
The petition will be placed in the
docket. Anyone is able to search the
electronic form of all documents
received into any of our dockets by the
name of the individual submitting the
comment (or signing the comment, if
submitted on behalf of an association,
business, labor union, etc.). You may
review DOT’s complete Privacy Act
Statement in the Federal Register
published on April 11, 2000 (Volume
65, Number 70; Pages 19477–78).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Carla Cuentas, Office of
Crashworthiness Standards, Light Duty
Vehicle Division (telephone 202–366–
4583, fax 202–493–2739). For legal
issues, contact Deirdre Fujita, Office of
Chief Counsel (telephone 202–366–
2992, fax 202–366–3820). You may send
mail to these officials at the National
Highway Traffic Safety Administration,
U.S. Department of Transportation, 1200
New Jersey Avenue, SE., West Building,
Washington, DC 20590.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Background
II. Factors for Decision-Making
a. Guiding Factors
b. Child Restraint Data
c. Additional Considerations
III. Proposed Changes
IV. Comments and Agency Responses on
CRSs in Appendix A
a. Deletions
b. Additions (Identified in Table 1)
1. Proposed Inclusion of Graco Snugride to
Subpart B
2. Proposed Inclusion of Peg Perego Primo
Viaggio #IMCC00US to Subpart B
3. Proposed Inclusion of the Evenflo
Generations #352 to Subpart C
4. Proposed Inclusion of Cosco Summit
Deluxe #22–260 to Subpart C
5. Proposed Inclusion of the Graco SafeSeat
(Step 2) #8B02 to Subpart C
c. Updating Other CRSs in Appendix A
(Identified in Table 2)
1. Angel Guard Angel Ride #AA2403FOF
(Subpart A)
2. Cosco Arriva #22–013 (Subpart B)
3. Britax Roundabout #E9L02 (Subpart C)
4. Graco ComfortSport (Subpart C)
5. Evenflo Tribute V Deluxe #379 (Subpart
C)
6. Graco Cherished Cargo (Subpart D)
7. Cosco High Back Booster #22–209
(Subpart D)
V. Compliance Date
VI. Early Compliance and Picking and
Choosing of CRSs
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VII. Testing Issues
a. Positioning of Adjustable Features
b. Testing the Car Bed
c. Testing Forward-Facing-Only CRSs in
Rear-Facing Configurations
d. Specifying the Type Of Harness Used
For Testing
VIII. Suggestions for Future Amendments
a. Publishing a Yearly Bulletin
b. Meaning of ‘‘Available for Purchase’’
c. Developing ‘‘standard’’ models of CRSs
d. Define ‘‘model’’ in Child Restraint
System Standard
e. Rear-Facing CRSs With High Profiles
IX. Specification of a Manufactured On or
After Date for the Newly Added CRSs
X. Rulemaking Analyses and Notices
This final rule amends FMVSS No.
208 to update the child restraint systems
(CRSs) listed in Appendix A of the
standard. The notice of proposed
rulemaking (NPRM) preceding this final
rule was published on September 25,
2007 (72 FR 54402; Docket 2007–
28710).
I. Background
FMVSS No. 208 (49 CFR 571.208)
requires passenger cars and trucks,
buses, and multipurpose passenger
vehicles with a gross vehicle weight
rating (GVWR) of 3,856 kilograms (kg)
(8,500 pounds (lb)) or less and an
unloaded vehicle weight of 2,495 kg
(5,500 lb) or less to be equipped with
seat belts and frontal air bags for the
protection of vehicle occupants in
crashes. While air bags have been very
effective in protecting people in
moderate and high speed frontal
crashes, there have been instances in
which they have caused serious or fatal
injuries to occupants who were very
close to the air bag when it deployed.
On May 12, 2000, NHTSA published a
final rule to require that air bags be
designed to create less risk of serious air
bag-induced injuries and provide
improved frontal crash protection for all
occupants, by means that include
advanced air bag technology
(‘‘Advanced Air Bag Rule,’’ 65 FR
30680, Docket No. NHTSA 00–7013).
Under the Advanced Air Bag Rule, to
minimize the risk to infants and small
children from deploying air bags,
manufacturers may suppress an air bag
in the presence of a CRS or provide a
low risk deployment (LRD) system.1
1 The LRD option involves deployment of the air
bag in the presence of a Child Restraint Air Bag
Interaction (CRABI) test dummy, representing a 12month-old child, in a rear-facing child restraint.
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Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 219 / Wednesday, November 12, 2008 / Rules and Regulations
To minimize the risk to children,
manufacturers relying on an air bag
suppression or LRD system must ensure
that the vehicle complies with the
suppression or LRD requirements when
tested with the CRSs specified in
Appendix A of the standard. As part of
ensuring the robustness of automatic air
bag suppression and LRD systems,
NHTSA made sure that the appendix
contained CRSs that represented a large
portion of the CRS market and CRSs
with unique size and weight
characteristics. NHTSA also planned
regular updates to Appendix A.
On November 19, 2003, in response to
petitions for reconsideration of the May
2000 Advanced Air Bag Rule, the
agency published a final rule that
revised Appendix A by adding two
CRSs that were equipped with
components that attach to a vehicle’s
LATCH 2 system (68 FR 65179, Docket
No. NHTSA 03–16476). The appendix
has not been updated since then.
CRSs in Appendix A
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Appendix A is made up of four (4)
subparts, subparts A through D. There
are one (1) car bed, seven (7) rear-facing
child restraint systems, nine (9)
forward-facing toddler and forwardfacing convertible CRSs and four (4)
forward-facing toddler/belt positioning
booster systems currently listed and
deemed ‘‘effective’’ (i.e., may be used in
compliance testing) in Appendix A.
• Subpart A lists a car bed that can
be used by the agency to test the
suppression system of a vehicle that is
manufactured on or after the effective
date specified in Appendix A and that
has been certified as being in
compliance with 49 CFR 571.208, S19.
• Subpart B lists rear-facing CRSs that
can be used by the agency to test the
suppression system or the LRD
capabilities of a vehicle that is
manufactured on or after the effective
date and prior to the termination date
specified in the appendix and that has
2 ‘‘LATCH’’ stands for ‘‘Lower Anchors and
Tethers for Children,’’ a term that was developed
by child restraint manufacturers and retailers to
refer to the standardized child restraint anchorage
system that vehicle manufacturers must install
pursuant to FMVSS No. 225, Child Restraint
Anchorage Systems (49 CFR § 571.225). The LATCH
system is comprised of two lower anchorages and
one tether anchorage. Each lower anchorage is a
rigid round rod or bar onto which the connector of
a CRS can be attached. FMVSS No. 225 does not
permit vehicle manufacturers to install LATCH
systems in front designated seating positions unless
the vehicle has an air bag on-off switch meeting the
requirements of S4.5.4 of FMVSS No. 208. Since
September 1, 2002, CRSs have been required by
FMVSS No. 213, Child Restraint Systems (49 CFR
§ 571.213), to have permanently attached
components that enable the CRS to connect to a
LATCH system on a vehicle.
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been certified as being in compliance
with 49 CFR 571.208, S19.
• Subpart C lists forward-facing
toddler and forward-facing convertible 3
CRSs that can be used by the agency to
test the suppression system or the LRD
capabilities of a vehicle that is
manufactured on or after the effective
date and prior to the termination date
specified in the appendix and that has
been certified as being in compliance
with 49 CFR 571.208, S19 or S21.
• Subpart D lists forward-facing
toddler/belt positioning booster systems
and belt positioning booster systems
that can be used by the agency to test
the suppression system capabilities of a
vehicle that is manufactured on or after
the effective date and prior to the
termination date specified in the
appendix and that has been certified as
being in compliance with 49 CFR
571.208, S21 or S23.
II. Factors for Decision-Making
a. Guiding Factors
The November 2003 FMVSS No. 208
final rule discussed factors that the
agency considers in deciding whether
Appendix A should be updated (68 FR
at 65188). NHTSA reviews the appendix
to: Maintain a spectrum of CRSs that is
representative of the CRS population in
production, ensure that only relatively
current restraints will be used for
compliance testing, determine the
availability of the CRSs and determine
any change in design, other than those
that are purely cosmetic. (If a change to
a CRS were clearly cosmetic, such as
color scheme or upholstery, the list
would not be modified.) 4 In considering
whether a particular restraint should be
in Appendix A, the agency considers
whether the restraint—
—Has mass and dimensions
representative of many restraints on
the market,
—Has mass and dimensions
representing outliers, and
—Has been a high sales volume model.
In developing the 2007 NPRM,
NHTSA evaluated data, discussed
below, and systematically evaluated the
CRSs in Appendix A. We assessed child
3 A convertible CRS is one that converts from a
rear-facing seat to a forward-facing seat. A
combination CRS is one that converts from a
forward-facing seat to a booster seat or a CRS that
is a convertible that can also be used as a booster.
4 We
also stated in the rule that, in considering
whether to amend the appendix, we assess whether
a variety of restraint manufacturers are represented
in the appendix, and whether a combination of
restraints are in the appendix. Id. These
considerations bear on our assessment of the degree
to which the CRSs in the appendix are
representative of child restraints in the real world
and assess the robustness of advanced air bag
systems.
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restraint system dimensions, weight
(mass) and sales volumes (based on
confidential manufacturers’ data) to
identify which CRSs have dimensions
that were representative of the average
restraint in today’s market, and which
were possible outliers, with dimensions,
weight 5 and/or footprints 6 markedly
outside of those of the ‘‘average’’ CRS.
In addition, the agency identified which
CRSs had high production totals and,
therefore, likely to have the greatest
market share (highest sales volume).
b. Child Restraint Data
The data used for the NPRM were
obtained from CRS manufacturers and
NHTSA’s Ease-of-Use (EOU) consumer
information program. The agency’s EOU
program started in 2002 in response to
the Transportation Recall Enhancement,
Accountability, and Documentation
(TREAD) Act, which directed NHTSA to
issue a notice to establish a child
restraint safety rating consumer
information program to provide
practicable, readily understandable, and
timely information to consumers for use
in making informed decisions in the
purchase of child restraints. The EOU
program provides information about
child restraints with features that are
easier for consumers to use and install
correctly. The EOU program seeks to
evaluate all CRSs available for sale at
retail outlets.
The 2006 EOU program assessed 99
different CRSs (including carryover
seats from the previous year that were
not changed), selected from 14 different
manufacturers (Docket No. NHTSA–
2006–25344). In addition to those 99
CRSs, data for the CRSs currently listed
in Appendix A were also collected
during the 2006 EOU program. These
EOU data were used to determine
whether any changes to the appendix
were warranted.
c. Additional Considerations
The agency believes that Appendix A
should include CRSs with a gamut of
features that would robustly assess
advanced air bag technologies.
Automatic air bag suppression systems
suppress the air bag when a small child
or a child in a CRS is placed on the seat,
and enable the air bag’s deployment
when most adults occupy the seat. With
5 Since the CRSs are used to test air bag
suppression systems, it was important to identify
which CRSs were the lightest and heaviest, and
those that are representative of the average restraint
in today’s market in terms of weight.
6 Some air bag suppression systems may have
trouble sensing a CRS if the footprint is shaped in
a way that loads the air bag suppression system
sensors or load cells differently than the CRSs for
which the suppression system was designed to
recognize.
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Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 219 / Wednesday, November 12, 2008 / Rules and Regulations
respect to CRSs in Appendix A, LRD
systems deploy the air bag in the
presence of a CRABI dummy in a rearfacing CRS. The design and calibration
of the advanced air bag system used
must perform satisfactorily with a wide
range of CRSs that could be installed in
the vehicle. With that in mind, the
NPRM considered the following factors
in choosing CRSs for inclusion in
Appendix A.
First, with LRD systems for infants
already being used in some vehicles, the
agency sought to include rear-facing
child restraints of varying seat back
heights. On the one hand, rear-facing
CRSs with relatively low seat back
heights could in some circumstances
present a more challenging test of an
LRD system, especially one consisting of
an air bag mounted on the top of the
instrument panel, since the back of the
CRS presents less of a reaction surface
(resistance). With a low back, the air bag
could fully pressurize and interact in a
fully energized state with the child’s
head as the bag comes over the top of
the CRS seat back. However, recent
agency testing indicates that CRSs with
high backs provide significant
performance challenges to infant LRD
systems. Therefore, we sought to
include in Appendix A rear-facing and
convertible CRSs with seat back heights
that range from 12.75 to 27 in 7 8 to
diversify the spectrum of seat back
heights.
Second, features such as handles and
sunshields of a rear-facing CRS may
complicate and challenge the sensing
operation of certain advanced air bag
systems relying on future technologies
such as vision-based advanced air bag
systems. To ensure that advanced air
bags perform well with all types of rearfacing CRSs, the agency purposefully
includes in Appendix A rear-facing
CRSs that have handles and sunshields.
NHTSA compliance test procedures
specify adjustments of the handles and
sunshields to the positions specified in
the standard to ensure the robustness of
the advanced air bag system.
Third, since CRSs have been required
to have LATCH components since
September 1, 2002, the agency has
decided to replace many of the older
non-LATCH CRSs in Appendix A with
new equivalent LATCH-equipped CRSs
from the same manufacturer.9 On the
other hand, when the LATCH
requirement became effective in 2002
for child restraints, CRS manufacturers
did not significantly change CRS
structures or designs. Accordingly, we
expect that suppression and LRD
systems will react to LATCH and nonLATCH CRSs similarly. In addition,
very few vehicles will have lower
anchors in the front outboard passenger
seat.
III. Proposed Changes
After considering the factors for
decision-making discussed in the
previous section of this preamble,
NHTSA proposed to delete certain CRSs
from Appendix A and to add others.10
The agency noted that some CRSs
undergo annual cosmetic changes that
result in different model numbers for
the new version, and that some of the
model numbers of the CRSs in the
NPRM could thus be different in the
final rule to reflect the latest model
number. The agency docketed a
document entitled, ‘‘Technical
Assessment of Child Restraint Systems
for FMVSS No. 208, Occupant Crash
Protection, Appendix A,’’ that includes
dimensional information, pictures, and
statistical data on the current CRSs in
the appendix and the CRSs proposed for
inclusion in the appendix (Docket No.
2007–28710–0002) (hereinafter referred
to as the 2007 Technical Assessment).
The agency proposed to delete six (6)
existing CRSs and to add five (5) new
CRSs (see Table 1 below, which
reproduces Table 1 of the NPRM). The
reasons for each proposed deletion or
addition were discussed in detail in the
NPRM and readers may refer to the
NPRM for that information (72 FR at
54405–54407). Our proposed deletions
were based generally on CRSs that did
not offer any unique characteristics,
those that were produced in the smallest
quantities, or those that have not been
in production for some time. If we
proposed eliminating a CRS that offered
a unique characteristic, we proposed to
replace it with a similar CRS. Our
proposed additions also sought to
include more LATCH-equipped CRSs in
the appendix.
In addition, comments were requested
on cosmetic replacements of other CRSs
in Appendix A (see Table 2 below,
which reproduces Table 2 of the
NPRM). The reasons for the updates
were discussed in detail in the NPRM
(72 FR at 54407–54408). These changes
primarily would update the older CRSs
in the appendix with newer model CRSs
that have the same main physical
features as the older restraints. To
obtain information on whether CRSs in
Appendix A could be replaced by
newer, more available models with the
same relevant physical features as the
Appendix A child restraints, we
contacted each manufacturer of the
listed CRS and asked which of their
more recently-produced CRSs could be
considered an equivalent replacement
for the Appendix A CRS. With one
exception related to the Cosco Dream
Ride car bed, manufacturers were able
to suggest a possible replacement.11 We
decided that the CRSs in the Appendix
that have been out of production the
longest (i.e., the hardest CRSs to acquire
for testing purposes) should be replaced
with newer-model CRSs.
TABLE 1—SUMMARY OF PROPOSED DELETIONS AND ADDITIONS TO APPENDIX A
Name
Appendix
subpart
Type
Deletions
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Britax Handle With Care #191 ....................................................................................
Century Assura #4553 ................................................................................................
Century Encore #4612 ...............................................................................................
Cosco Olympian #02803 ............................................................................................
7 The upper end of the spectrum (27 in)
represents convertible CRSs, which have higher seat
back heights than rear-facing-only CRSs.
8 The height measurement used for the rear-facing
CRSs is the height with their base.
9 The newly added car bed is the only CRS
replacement that came from a different
manufacturer.
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Rear-Facing .............................................
Rear-Facing .............................................
Convertible ..............................................
Convertible ..............................................
10 We noted in the November 2003 FMVSS No.
208 final rule that our periodic review of the child
restraints in the appendix may cause the number of
CRSs contained therein to change slightly as we
identify different trends in the use of CRSs from
prior periods. We said then that the number of CRSs
should not vary by more than 10–20 percent absent
any dramatic changes in the design of restraints.
11 Subpart A of the appendix lists the Cosco
Dream Ride car bed which is no longer being
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B.
B.
C.
C.
manufactured for retail sale. Cosco was unable to
suggest a replacement for this CRS because the
manufacturer no longer sells car beds to the general
public (the CRS is manufactured and sold mainly
for special needs accounts). After consulting with
the major CRS manufacturers, we only found one
car bed that is being manufactured, the Angel Guard
Angel Ride. We proposed the Angel Guard Angel
Ride as our replacement choice because the CRS is
available to the general public.
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66789
TABLE 1—SUMMARY OF PROPOSED DELETIONS AND ADDITIONS TO APPENDIX A—Continued
Appendix
subpart
Name
Type
Safety 1st Comfort Ride #22–400 ..............................................................................
Britax Expressway ISOFIX .........................................................................................
Convertible ..............................................
Forward-Facing .......................................
C.
C.
Rear-Facing .............................................
Rear-Facing .............................................
Forward-Facing .......................................
Convertible ..............................................
Combination ............................................
B.
B.
C.
C.
C.
Additions
Graco Snugride ..........................................................................................................
Peg Perego Viaggio #IMCC00US ..............................................................................
Cosco Summit DX #22–260 .......................................................................................
Evenflo Generations #352 ..........................................................................................
Graco Safeseat (Step 2) ............................................................................................
TABLE 2—CRSS THAT COULD BE REPLACED WITH SIMILAR, MORE RECENTLY PRODUCED RESTRAINTS, AND WHAT
THOSE REPLACEMENTS SHOULD BE
Appendix A
subpart
A
B
C
C
C
D
D
CRS in Appendix A
........................
........................
........................
........................
........................
........................
........................
Type of CRS
Cosco Dream Ride ..............................................
Cosco Arriva 02–727 ..........................................
Britax Roundabout ..............................................
Century Encore 12 ...............................................
Evenflo Horizon V ...............................................
Century Next Step ...............................................
Cosco High Back Booster ...................................
Car bed ........................
Rear-facing ...................
Convertible ...................
Convertible ...................
Convertible ...................
Combination .................
Booster .........................
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IV. Comments and Agency Responses
on CRSs in Appendix A
The agency received comments on the
proposal from the Alliance of
Automobile Manufacturers (Alliance),13
Porsche Cars North America, Inc.
(Porsche), TRW Automotive (TRW),
Ferrari, General Motors (GM), the
Automotive Occupant Restraints
Council (AORC), and from community
interest groups Safe Ride News and
Traffic Safety Projects. Commenters
overwhelmingly supported the deletions
identified in Table 1 and Table 2 and
generally supported the proposed
additions identified in the tables, with
many suggesting further amendments to
Appendix A. Several commenters raised
concerns about the effective date. For
example, the Alliance stated that it
believes that as many as possible of the
unavailable CRSs in Appendix A should
be replaced with respect to new vehicle
models, but manufacturers should be
allowed to continue to certify
previously certified models using the
existing version of the appendix for at
least three years.14 In contrast, Safe Ride
12 We later realized that reference to the Encore
was in error.
13 The Alliance is made up of BMW group,
Chrysler LLC, Ford Motor Company, General
Motors, Mazda, Mitsubishi Motors, Porsche, Toyota,
and Volkswagen.
14 In a petition for rulemaking dated April 27,
2007, the Alliance requested NHTSA to amend
FMVSS No. 208 to allow manufacturers the option
of certifying vehicles to any edition of Appendix A
for five model years after the edition first becomes
effective. (In its comment to the September 25, 2007
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News expressed concern that the
proposed lead time ‘‘could stretch out
the wait before these new CRSs are
introduced for testing to Model Year
2010 or later.’’ Some commenters asked
for clarification of testing issues, and
there were a number of ideas suggested
for improving the ease and timeliness of
future amendments to Appendix A and
for selecting the CRSs that should be
included in the appendix. These and
NPRM, the Alliance reduced the suggested 5-year
compliance period to 3 years for this effort to revise
Appendix A, recognizing that the appendix has not
been amended in several years.)
The petition also requested that the agency
commit to amending the appendix every three years
and revise the view the agency announced in the
past that the appendix should be amended
annually. The Alliance believes that annual
revisions are not needed to protect children because
experience has shown that, despite the fact that the
appendix has not been amended since 2003, there
is no known incident in which a child in a CRS in
the front seat of a vehicle equipped with advanced
air bags received a serious injury due to the
deployment of an air bag. In addition, the Alliance
believed that annual updates to the appendix is
inconsistent with the realities of the automobile
industry, because retesting and recertifying existing
vehicle models every year as new CRSs are added
to the appendix would, as the petitioner stated,
‘‘create a tremendous burden on manufacturers
which * * * [in light of the absence of known
injuries to a child caused by an advanced air bag
system] would yield little or no safety benefits.’’
The petitioner stated that it recognized that ‘‘in the
event of some unanticipated safety need, such as
the introduction of an entirely new style of CRS that
captures a significant portion of the market, the
agency could revise the appendix—subject to notice
and lead time constraints—without waiting for
three years from the prior update.’’ The agency is
responding to issues raised in the petition both in
this final rule, and in a separate rulemaking action.
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Replacement
Angel Guard Angel Ride #AA2403FOF.
Cosco Arriva #22–013.
Britax Roundabout #E9L02.
Graco ComfortSport.
Evenflo Tribute 5 Deluxe #379.
Graco Cherished Cargo.
Cosco Hi Back Booster #22–209.
other issues are addressed in this and
the following sections.
Accompanying this final rule is an
updated Technical Assessment of Child
Restraint Systems that we have placed
in the docket for this final rule (‘‘2008
Technical Assessment’’). The
assessment contains dimensional
information and pictures of the CRSs
adopted into Appendix A by this final
rule, and statistical data of past EOU
data.
To improve the clarity of the
appendix, we have reformatted the
tables of Appendix A and have set forth
an Appendix A–1 which incorporates
the revisions adopted by this final rule.
a. Deletions
All commenters supported the
proposed deletion of the six CRSs from
Appendix A (described in Table 1,
above). No commenter opposed the
deletions. Several commenters
suggested that we refresh all the CRSs
in the appendix.
Agency Response: We are adopting
the proposed deletions for the reasons
discussed in the NPRM. Regarding the
Britax Expressway ISOFIX, this CRS is
removed from Appendix A effective on
the date of publication of this final rule.
Deleting and replacing all the CRSs in
the appendix is outside the scope of the
present rulemaking. However, we
concur with the view that circumstances
may warrant updating more than 10 to
20 percent of the number of CRSs in the
appendix. The allocation of agency
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resources have hampered our periodic
updates of the appendix, so it could be
prudent for a rulemaking, such as
today’s final rule, to affect more than 10
to 20 percent of the CRSs in the
appendix.
b. Additions (Identified in Table 1)
With the exception of the Peg Perego
Viaggio #IMCC00US, the five child
restraints that we proposed to add to
Appendix A were supported by
commenters. Accordingly, with the
exception of the Peg Perego Viaggio
#IMCC00US, we are adopting the CRSs
for the reasons provided in the NPRM.
However, several commenters had
questions about some of the restraints
and requested clarification of the
proposal.
mstockstill on PROD1PC66 with RULES
1. Proposed Inclusion of Graco Snugride
to Subpart B
GM and the Alliance stated that the
NPRM did not provide a model number
in Table 1 or in the proposed regulatory
text, while the preamble and 2007
Technical Assessment denoted model
#8643. TRW noted that it observed that
myriad variants of the Snugride exist
which appear to have essentially similar
construction to the #8643 model and
which would likely perform identically
in suppression or LRD tests.
Agency Response: Our intent was not
to provide a model number for this CRS
in the regulatory text. The NPRM
mistakenly included the model number
for the Graco Snugride in the preamble
and the 2007 Technical Assessment.
Due to the dynamic nature of the CRS
industry, when selecting new CRSs for
the appendix, the agency sought to
provide, to the extent possible, generic
model numbers. The agency’s intention
was to make it easier for vehicle
manufacturers to find the newly added
CRSs by providing model numbers that
do not specify patterns for soft goods,
type of padding, etc., i.e., for items that
would not affect the performance of the
advanced air bag system. For some
CRSs, such as for Evenflo child
restraints, this meant requiring simply a
number prefix,15 or just a name, such as
for Graco child restraints, but some
CRSs required complete model
numbers, such as the child restraints
produced by Cosco. Thus, for the Graco
Snugride no model number was needed.
2. Proposed Inclusion of Peg Perego
Primo Viaggio #IMCC00US to Subpart B
Ferrari stated that the model number
proposed for this CRS was out of
production and recommended the
15 In the appendix, the additional numbers
following the prefix are indicated by ‘‘X’’s.
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addition of the new model number
IMUN00US. TRW stated that the rubber
inserts in the belt slots of the Primo
Viaggio have a tendency to grab the seat
belt webbing, making it difficult to
achieve the maximum 134 N belt
tension called for in FMVSS No. 208.
Agency Response: We agree to include
model IMUN00US instead of
IMCC00US. Market data indicate that
the model IMCC00US was discontinued
in August 2007 and replaced with the
new model name and number Peg
Perego Primo Viaggio SIP IMUN00US.
The changes made for the new version
of the Primo Viaggio SIP are a new
handlebar shape and more ear/head
padding.
NHTSA installed the Peg Perego
Primo Viaggio in seventeen (17) model
year (MY) 2008 vehicles and found that
while the rubber inserts do make it more
difficult to achieve the desired belt
tension, the desired belt tension is
attainable. We note that, to achieve the
specified load, the CRS base was preloaded prior to installing the CRS onto
the base. Since the IMUN00US is
similar structurally to the IMCC00US
and the specified FMVSS No. 208 belt
tension is achievable using the
IMUN00US, we are adding the Peg
Perego Primo Viaggio SIP IMUN00US to
Appendix A. Photographs of the two
CRSs can be found in the 2008
Technical Assessment.
model number to indicate that the
actual model number is several digits
long and that the 352 was simply a
prefix. The similar model observed by
TRW beginning with the 352 prefix is
thus an acceptable model.
With regard to combination CRSs,
Appendix A categories were developed
prior to the development of combination
CRSs. Therefore, there is not a subpart
of the appendix specific to these
restraints. These seats can perform as a
forward-facing harness restraint as well
as a booster seat using a vehicle’s seat
belt, so they can technically
accommodate a one-year-old, three-yearold, and six-year-old dummy. When
considering which subpart of the
appendix to categorize these seats, we
noted that the FMVSS No. 208 advanced
air bag system requirements do not
require combination CRSs in Subpart C
to be tested with the six-year-old
dummy. (See FMVSS No. 208, S23.)
Therefore, to ensure adequate testing of
all the modes a combination CRS can be
used for, we are listing the Evenflo
Generations 352xxxx in both Subparts C
and D of Appendix A.
The agency is responding to Ferrari’s
comment that the CRS should only be
used in rearward facing configurations
in the section of this preamble entitled,
‘‘Testing Issues.’’
3. Proposed Inclusion of the Evenflo
Generations #352 to Subpart C
The NPRM characterized the Evenflo
Generations as a convertible CRS.
GM and the Alliance stated that this
CRS was not on the manufacturer’s
website. Ferrari and TRW pointed out
that this CRS should be classified as a
combination CRS. Ferrari stated that it
supports the addition of the Evenflo
Generations only if it will be exempted
from testing in a rearward facing
configuration. TRW stated that there
were similar models to the CRS, such as
the Generations 3521804.
Agency Response: We are adding the
CRS to Appendix A, but we agree with
Ferrari and TRW that this CRS was
categorized incorrectly in the NPRM as
a convertible CRS. This CRS is a
forward-facing-only combination CRS.
Accordingly, it is listed under the
booster car seat section of the
manufacturer’s Web site.
As explained earlier in this preamble,
for purposes of Appendix A, Evenflo
child restraints can be identified by a
generic model number consisting of a
number prefix. The #352 model number
provided in the NPRM was merely a
prefix of the intended model number.
To avoid confusion, we have revised the
4. Proposed Inclusion of Cosco Summit
Deluxe #22–260 to Subpart C
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GM stated that it could not find a CRS
with the precise name and model
number provided in the NPRM and
suggested the Summit Deluxe High Back
Booster Car Seat model 22565 or the
Summit High Back Booster Car Seat
model 22260, noting that both have very
similar appearance and look like the
CRS in the photograph in the 2007
Technical Assessment. The Alliance
also pointed out that it could not
identify any Cosco CRS with the precise
name and model number identified in
the NPRM. Ferrari supported the
addition of the Summit Deluxe ‘‘only if
it will be exempted from testing in
rearward facing configurations.’’
Agency Response: The agency concurs
with the GM comment and is adopting
the Cosco Summit Deluxe High Back
Booster model 22–262 into Subparts C
and D of the appendix. A picture and
measurements of the CRS can be found
in the 2008 Technical Assessment. The
agency is responding to Ferrari’s
comment that the CRS should only be
used in rearward facing configurations
in the section of this preamble entitled,
‘‘Testing Issues.’’
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5. Proposed Inclusion of the Graco
SafeSeat (Step 2) #8B02 to Subpart C
The Alliance stated that this CRS was
on the manufacturer’s Web site but that
the Alliance was advised by Graco that
the company has stopped
manufacturing a model with the number
or will do so in the very near future. The
Alliance stated that NHTSA should
substitute the new model name/number
that Graco will use for this CRS. TRW
stated that Model #8B02 was not found
at any of six local large retailers, while
a very similar model 8B05 was found at
a local retailer and an online source was
located for this model.
Agency Response: As discussed
earlier, we mistakenly included the
model number in the preamble. A
model number is not needed. A Graco
representative (see agency ex parte
memorandum in the docket for this final
rule) confirmed that Graco model
numbers identify only cosmetic features
and that identifying the shell does not
necessitate identifying a model number.
Therefore, the Alliance’s concerns about
that particular model being
discontinued or TRW’s concern about
not finding that particular model at
large retail stores is not a problem. (In
addition, this CRS was incorrectly
categorized as a combination CRS in
Table 1 of the NPRM. As stated in the
preamble of that document, the child
restraint is a forward-facing only CRS.)
However, we are adding the word
‘‘Toddler’’ to the name because Graco’s
Web site and the EOU Web site both list
this CRS as the Graco Toddler SafeSeat.
Thus, this final rule adopts the Graco
Toddler SafeSeat Step 2.
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c. Updating Other CRSs in Appendix A
(Identified in Table 2)
Commenters generally supported the
seven changes identified in Table 2 of
the NPRM preamble (the same Table 2
above of today’s document).
1. Angel Guard Angel Ride
#AA2403FOF (Subpart A)
No commenter objected to including
this CRS, but TRW stated that it was
unable to find a retail source for this
CRS. TRW also expressed concern about
the size of this CRS because, the
commenter believed, vehicles may not
have enough seat belt webbing to reach
around it with the vehicle seat fully
forward. TRW recommended specifying
in FMVSS No. 208 that when the
vehicle seat belt lacks the length to
reach around a CRS, the vehicle seat is
moved to the ‘‘first position rearward of
full forward where the seat belt will go
around the CRS.’’
Agency Response: The agency is
replacing the Cosco Dream Ride with
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the Angel Guard Angel Ride
AA2403FOF, a car bed with a 3-point
harness, for the reasons provided in the
NPRM. The CRS can be ordered directly
through Angel Guard and through other
sources listed on the manufacturer’s
Web site (https://www.angel-guard.com).
The agency is responding to TRW’s
concern about vehicles’ having
sufficient belt length to encircle the
restraint in the section of this preamble
entitled, ‘‘Testing Issues.’’
2. Cosco Arriva #22–013 (Subpart B)
In their comments, GM and the
Alliance stated that they could not find
this CRS on the manufacturer’s Web
site. TRW also could not find any
sources for this CRS and was informed
that it is being phased out. Furthermore,
TRW requested clarification on whether
the Arriva 02–727 should be tested with
its base.
Agency Response: We are adopting
the Cosco Arriva #22–013PAW, a rearfacing CRS with a 5-point harness, to
replace its older counterpart as
proposed. The Cosco Arriva #22–
013PAW is mainly distributed to
hospitals, health departments, and child
safety businesses or organizations and is
not sold at retailers (these CRSs are
called ‘‘institutional CRSs’’). However,
this CRS is easily available to the public
as it can be ordered through Cosco or its
distributor, National Safety Resources.16
We will test the CRS with the base 22–
999WHO.
3. Britax Roundabout #E9L02 (Subpart
C)
The only comment received on this
CRS was from TRW, which supported
the change. TRW stated that this CRS
was found at large retailers.
Agency Response: We are making the
proposed change. However, we will
refer to the new restraint as the Britax
Roundabout E9L02xx; the last two digits
of the model number are not needed
because they indicate a specific fabric
design. The Britax Roundabout E9L02xx
is a convertible CRS with a 5-point
harness.
4. Graco ComfortSport (Subpart C)
The NPRM requested comments on
replacing the Century Encore with the
Graco ComfortSport. However, the
reference to the Century Encore was a
mistake; that CRS was proposed to be
deleted from Appendix A.
16 A representative of the manufacturer verified
that they are contemplating phasing out this CRS;
however, they said that they would continue
producing it as long as there was a demand for it
(see agency ex parte memorandum in the docket for
this final rule).
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66791
GM and the Alliance realized the
mistake, stating that the Graco
ComfortSport is actually a replacement
for the Century STE 1000, not the
Century Encore. In addition, the
Alliance asked for the identification of
a model number for the Graco
ComfortSport. TRW stated that it was
advised that the model number
provided in the 2007 Technical
Assessment was recalled and that a new
version was becoming available. TRW
noted that it purchased a ComfortSport
8C00 for evaluation, because it was
advised that all ComfortSports have the
same shell.
Agency Response: Commenters are
correct that we meant the Graco
ComfortSport to replace the Century
STE 1000. (The Century STE 1000 and
the Century Encore have essentially the
same shell, thus the ComfortSport could
have replaced either of these CRSs.) No
commenter opposed the addition of the
Graco ComfortSport, a convertible CRS
with a 5-point harness. We are thus
adopting the proposed change.
As discussed earlier, a model number
is not necessary to adequately identify
this Graco CRS. However, we note that
several ComfortSport models produced
between January 2, 2007 and August 31,
2007 were recalled due to possible
misrouting of the LATCH belt during
assembly. Graco has assured us that new
versions are available and that the
model numbers of the new versions end
in the number two (2). However, there
is still no need to specify a model
number for this CRS in Appendix A as
no substantive changes were made to
the CRS that will affect the performance
of a suppression or LRD system.
5. Evenflo Tribute V Deluxe #379
(Subpart C)
The NPRM requested comments on
replacing the Evenflo Horizon V with
the Evenflo Tribute V Deluxe 379. The
only comment on this proposed change
was from TRW, which stated that it
could not find the Evenflo Tribute V
Deluxe with the model number
provided in the NPRM.
Agency Response: As explained
above, the ‘‘379’’ is just a prefix that
precedes four other digits of the 7-digit
model number. We are clarifying the
regulatory text to make this clear.
Further, we are removing the ‘‘Deluxe’’
specification because it only designates
the fabric used and the addition of a cup
holder, which are features that will not
likely affect the performance of a
suppression or LRD system.
Accordingly, this final rule replaces the
Evenflo Horizon V with the Evenflo
Tribute V 379xxxx, a convertible CRS
with a 5-point harness.
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6. Graco Cherished Cargo (Subpart D)
GM and the Alliance stated that they
could not find the Cherished Cargo on
the manufacturer’s Web site, although
several models that share the name
Cargo do appear. TRW claimed that
Graco advised them that this CRS was
discontinued, but that all Cargo models
such as the Platinum, Ultra, etc., use the
same shell and are very similar. TRW
recommended we avoid the Cherished
Cargo and choose a different, more
readily available model of the Cargo
series, such as the Platinum Cargo.
Agency Response: For the reasons of
availability raised by the commenters,
we are replacing the Century Next Step
with the Graco Platinum Cargo, a
forward-facing-only combination CRS
with a 5-point harness. It will be listed
in both Subparts C and D of the
appendix. Graco has informed NHTSA
that the Cherished Cargo was not
discontinued, but that retailers no
longer want to carry this CRS in stock
(see agency ex parte memorandum in
the docket for this final rule). Graco also
confirmed that the Platinum Cargo has
the same shell as the Cherished Cargo
and it is more readily available. As
shown in photographs of the Platinum
Cargo and the Cherished Cargo, the
CRSs are interchangeable (see the 2008
Technical Assessment).
7. Cosco High Back Booster #22–209
(Subpart D)
The NPRM requested comments on
replacing the Cosco High Back Booster
with the Cosco High Back Booster 22–
209. TRW commented that it could not
find this seat at any of the six large
retailers it searched. They found similar
models such as the 22–206 at two of the
six retailers.
Agency Response: We are adopting
the Cosco High Back Booster 22–209, a
forward-facing only combination CRS
with a 5-point harness into Subparts C
and D of the appendix. As of July 28,
2008, the manufacturer’s Web site has a
list of retailers for this CRS on its Web
site.
mstockstill on PROD1PC66 with RULES
V. Compliance Date
Consistent with statements NHTSA
made in the November 19, 2003 FMVSS
No. 208 final rule regarding lead time
(68 FR at 65188), the agency proposed
that the compliance date for the
proposed changes to Appendix A be the
next model year introduced one year
after publication of a final rule
modifying Appendix A. The agency
believed that the lead time would be
sufficiently long to provide vehicle
manufacturers time to procure the
needed child restraints, test vehicles,
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and certify the air bag systems to
FMVSS No. 208, while ensuring the
satisfactory performance of vehicles’
suppression and LRD systems in an
expeditious manner.
This section addresses the following
comments relating to the compliance
date.
1. The Alliance agreed that the
proposed effective date of September 1,
2009 (the beginning of the next model
year introduced one year after the
anticipated date of publication of the
final rule) is reasonable with respect to
new vehicle models and to new child
protection systems that will be utilized
for the first time in MY 2010 (or later)
vehicles. However, the commenter
stated that requiring vehicle
manufacturers to recertify existing
vehicles utilizing a different set of CRSs
would impose a tremendous burden on
those manufacturers. The Alliance
urged the agency to provide
manufacturers the option of continuing
to certify, for at least three years, ‘‘carryover’’ models that were previously
certified to the existing version of
Appendix A. The commenter stated
that, on average, over 75 percent of its
members’ MY 2010 models will be
equipped with ‘‘child protection
systems that are identical to those in the
equivalent MY 2009 models.’’ The
commenter stated that in all likelihood
these models will be certified using the
CRSs on the existing Appendix A, and
that requiring them to be certified using
the CRSs on the new Appendix would
be extremely burdensome, ‘‘even apart
from whether the child protection
systems in those models would need to
be redesigned or recalibrated to assure
compliance with the standard.’’
Porsche, a member of the Alliance,
commented in support of the Alliance’s
comments, but added that the model
lifespan of Porsche vehicles is typically
longer than the industry norms, lasting
for seven years or more. Thus, Porsche
requested that NHTSA allow
manufacturers to use the existing
version of Appendix A for up to five
years following the effective date of the
final rule.17 ‘‘Any shorter time period
would likely result in a significant
amount of unnecessary testing,
especially under circumstances when
most or many of the child restraints on
the list are being replaced.’’
2. GM, an Alliance member, requested
that the effective date of the changes in
the final rule be no sooner than
September 1, 2010. GM submitted
17 Porsche noted that its request is similar to the
petition for rulemaking from the Alliance
requesting NHTSA to provide a five-year period for
carry-over models that were certified to the existing
version of Appendix A.
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confidential information that provided
an estimate of ‘‘the amount of work
needed to evaluate, potentially modify,
and validate’’ its carry-over vehicle
platforms and believed that the work
could not be completed by ‘‘the next
model year introduced one year after
publication of the final rule.’’ GM
believed that delaying the effective date
until September 1, 2010 would not
increase any risks to safety, because it
has no indications ‘‘that there are any
CRSs in use that do not properly
classify’’ with their advanced air bag
systems.
3. Ferrari addressed the effective date
for the Table 2 changes. The commenter
stated that there would be an
unnecessary burden on the
manufacturers if existing vehicles
models already certified to comply with
the old CRSs in Table 2 have to be
certified again for compliance with the
new CRSs. Ferrari suggested that
NHTSA add a provision to FMVSS No.
208 stating that if a vehicle
manufacturer previously certified a
vehicle model using an older CRS listed
in Table 2 and has so certified prior to
the listing of the newer equivalent CRS
in Appendix A, then the vehicle
manufacturer does not have to retest
said vehicle model using the newer
CRS. Ferrari believed that ‘‘This
approach avoids costly retesting and
since the newer CRS is by definition
‘equivalent’ to the older CRS, there is no
negative effect on safety.’’
4. In contrast to the above comments,
some comments supported the proposed
effective date or expressed concern that
it was too long. TRW stated that it saw
no concerns with the proposed effective
date and believed that it provides
sufficient time to adopt the
requirements of the proposed rule. Safe
Ride News believed that the proposed
effective date would be ‘‘too long to
wait.’’ The commenter was concerned
that because the appendix has not been
updated in years, it is no longer
representative of heavier CRSs that have
been on the market for several years.
Safe Ride News did not consider it an
unreasonable request to shorten the
lead-time for manufacturers since the
new CRSs will not be difficult to
acquire.
Agency Response: NHTSA
acknowledges that there are competing
considerations in updating Appendix A,
specifically, the need to have a
representative list while maintaining
some stability to minimize the
certification burden. Having the list
reflect real-world use of a variety of
child restraints, and ensuring the
compatibility of suppression and LRD
systems with those restraints, argue for
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expediency. On the other hand, time
constraints and costs associated with
certification burdens resulting from
changes to the appendix dictate that
there are limits to how close in time an
effective date can be set. Moreover, as
part of the exercise of balancing those
interests, we also consider the actual
effect that the change to Appendix A
has on the robustness of the advanced
air bag system, i.e., whether the change
to the appendix will result in an actual
real-world safety improvement.
NHTSA evaluated the 2000–2007
EOU measurement data to determine if
there have been significant shifts in the
characteristics of CRSs since 2000 and
did not observe any indication of
definitive shifts in the CRS
characteristics pertinent to air bag
performance. (See 2008 Technical
Assessment.) For the few changes we
did observe, the changes do not appear
enough to alter an advanced air bag
system’s performance. NHTSA
undertook indicant tests of seventeen
(17) MY 2008 vehicles to assist in
determining whether the CRSs being
added to the appendix would require
manufacturers to redesign their
advanced air bag systems. (See matrix in
the 2008 Technical Assessment.) The
tests indicate that the suppression
systems will continue to meet FMVSS
No. 208 suppression requirements. This
finding is consistent with GM’s
comment that its vehicles continue to
classify CRSs correctly when tested with
the CRSs newly added to Appendix A.
The agency is currently working on a
response to the Alliance’s April 2007
petition; therefore, the suggestions of
the petitioners that there should be a set
lead time period of 3 or 5 years for recertification of carry-over models will
be addressed in a subsequent
rulemaking action. However, to address
the recertification concerns with respect
to this Appendix A update, we have
decided that a balancing of the
competing interests can be effectively
realized by maintaining the compliance
date of September 1, 2009 (the
beginning of the next model year
introduced approximately one year after
date of publication of this final rule),
while phasing-in the requirement.18 The
effective date and phase-in schedule
apply to all vehicles, without
differentiation between new and ‘‘carryover’’ models (these are vehicles that
were previously certified to the existing
Appendix A). Under the phase-in, 50
percent of vehicles manufactured on or
18 As with all phase-ins, the agency is adopting
a reporting and recordkeeping requirement to
facilitate the agency’s enforcement of the standard.
These reporting and recordkeeping requirements
will be set forth in 49 CFR Part 585, Subpart D.
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after September 1, 2009 must be
certified as meeting FMVSS No. 208
when tested with the CRSs on the
revised appendix (which we have
designated ‘‘Appendix A–1’’), and all
vehicles manufactured on or after
September 1, 2010 must be so certified
as meeting FMVSS No. 208 when tested
with the Appendix A–1 child restraints.
The September 1, 2009 date ensures that
suppression and LRD systems will be
tested with representative child
restraints in an expeditious manner and
thus maintains the robustness of the
FMVSS No. 208 test and the soundness
of the child protection systems, while
the phase-in addresses the vehicle
manufacturers’ certification burdens.
Since there are no marked shifts in the
dimensional characteristics of CRSs, a
phase-in will not have a negative impact
on child safety.19
The phase-in has a practical effect of
permitting 50 percent of carry-over
vehicles to continue to certify to the
existing appendix for a period, albeit for
a shorter period than the Alliance’s
suggested period of 3 years or Porsche’s
suggested period of 5 years. (A
manufacturer may choose to have new
model vehicles or carry-over vehicles of
established models, or both, comprise
the 50 percent of vehicles that can be
phased-in to the requirement to certify
to the revised Appendix A.) The ability
to carry over a large percentage of its
vehicles for a year works to alleviate
compliance burdens on manufacturers.
On the other hand, in response to Safe
Ride News, we do not agree that the
September 1, 2009 date could be moved
up. Although the CRSs newly added to
Appendix A will be more readily
available than the current seats,
recertifying to the new appendix will
involve more than just procuring the
new CRSs. Vehicle manufacturers need
time to test and certify their vehicles.
Further, as noted above, we have not
seen indication of significant shifts in
the CRS characteristics pertinent to air
bag performance, so there is not a need
to expedite the September 1, 2009 date
based on potential real-world safety
benefits that could be gained.
We are denying Ferrari’s suggestion
that we specify in FMVSS No. 208 that
if a vehicle manufacturer previously
19 We are submitting a request for OMB clearance
of the collection of information required under a
phase-in (for compliance purposes, manufacturers
must keep records of the vehicles certified to the
current Appendix A or to the amended Appendix
A, and report that information to NHTSA so that the
agency knows which CRSs to use to test vehicles
to FMVSS No. 208 suppression and LRD
requirements). We request comments on the
collection of information. See the section of this
preamble entitled, ‘‘Regulatory Analyses and
Notices.’’
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66793
certified a vehicle model using an older
CRS that was replaced by this final rule
by an ‘‘equivalent’’ CRS (these CRSs
were listed in Table 2 of the NPRM and
Table 2 of this preamble), the vehicle
manufacturer does not have to retest
said vehicle model using the newer
CRS. We do not believe that such a
provision is necessary or appropriate.
NHTSA does not require vehicle
manufacturers to undertake any of the
testing specified in the FMVSSs; a
manufacturer just needs to ensure that
its vehicles meet the requirements of the
applicable standard when NHTSA tests
the manufacturer’s vehicles using the
procedures specified in the standard.
Thus, a manufacturer has the discretion
to decide what testing, if any, is needed
to certify the vehicle with the updated
appendix.
VI. Early Compliance and Picking and
Choosing of CRSs
The NPRM proposed to provide
manufacturers the option of early
compliance with the amended list, i.e.,
it was proposed that manufacturers may
choose to certify their vehicles with the
updated Appendix A prior to the
effective date of the provision, as long
as the manufacturer notifies the agency
that it is exercising this option.
However, NHTSA proposed that
manufacturers choosing the early
compliance option would not be
permitted to pick and choose among the
CRSs that would be newly added by the
final rule. Vehicle manufacturers
choosing the early compliance option
would have to ensure that their vehicles
meet the advanced air bag requirements
when NHTSA uses all of the newlyadded CRSs (along with the CRSs that
were not affected by the amendment).
NHTSA proposed this limitation to
maintain the integrity of the appendix:
The child restraints in each appendix
are each part of a comprehensive set
based on their physical characteristics
and as such, should be maintained as a
set.
Agency Response: No commenter
objected to the proposal, although the
Alliance stated that lead time
constraints make it very unlikely that
any manufacturer will be able to certify
its MY 2009 vehicles to the new version,
since, the commenter stated, the sales of
these vehicles generally commence in
the fall of 2008 or earlier. We are
ratifying the provisions discussed above
without change. Manufacturers may not
pick and choose to certify with some
CRSs from Appendix A and some from
Appendix A–1.
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VII. Testing Issues
Commenters raised questions relating
to how the agency will use the CRSs in
Appendix A. These questions are
answered below.
a. Positioning of Adjustable Features
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TRW recommends that NHTSA
specify what position(s) the adjustable
features, e.g., adjustable headrests
(Evenflo Generations) and positionable
‘‘feet’’ (Graco Snugride and Evenflo
Discovery Adjust Right), should be in
during testing because, the commenter
stated, they may affect their installation
in a vehicle and/or how the CRS
interacts with the vehicle seat,
suppression system sensors, or
deploying air bags.
Agency Response: We do not agree
that minor adjustments need to be
specified in the standard. For the
FMVSS No. 208 tests conducted with
CRSs, the standard’s test procedures
state that the installer should follow, to
the extent possible, the child restraint
manufacturer’s directions regarding
proper installation of the CRS. Those
directions generally provide sufficient
information to conduct the compliance
test. For example, Evenflo’s instructions
for the Evenflo Generations state that
the headrest should be positioned
immediately above the harness slots in
use. For other adjustments, the standard
is silent because the adjustment is
irrelevant for the compliance test; it
does not matter how the feature is
adjusted because the adjustment does
not affect the performance results.
For a few adjustments, FMVSS No.
208 specifically overrides the
manufacturer’s instructions but is clear
in its instruction in those instances. For
example, the agency’s FMVSS No. 208
test procedure (TP 208) does not require
that the CRS be at the manufacturer’s
recommended angle.20 In its comment
on the NPRM, TRW recommended
rewording FMVSS No. 208 and TP208
to require that the CRS level indicator,
if present, be in the recommended
range. We disagree with this suggestion.
FMVSS No. 208 does not specifically
require that the CRS level indicator be
in the recommended range because the
use of positioning devices, such as
20 FMVSS No. 208, S20.2.1.5(c) states: ‘‘* * *
secure the child restraint by following, to the extent
possible, the child restraint manufacturer’s
directions regarding proper installation of the
restraint for the orientation being installed.’’ The TP
208–13, Data Sheet 17, Page 111, states: ‘‘Do not use
any positioning devices such as towels.’’ Therefore,
even though the CRS manufacturer’s directions
specify a recommended angle, achieving it will not
be required for compliance tests if the use of
positioning devices is necessary.
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rolled up towels, do not allow
repeatable installations.21
there is contact by the CRS or test
dummy with the instrument panel.
b. Testing the Car Bed
c. Testing Forward-Facing-Only CRSs in
Rear-Facing Configurations
Ferrari stated that it supported the
addition of forward-facing-only CRSs to
subpart C of Appendix A only if the
CRSs are excluded from testing in a
rear-facing configuration. Ferrari
believed that forward-facing-only CRSs
should not be used for testing in a rearfacing configuration and that FMVSS
No. 208 and subpart C of the appendix
should be revised to exclude forwardfacing-only CRSs from all types of rearfacing testing. Ferrari also
recommended splitting subpart C into
two lists, convertibles (C1) and forwardfacing-only CRSs (C2), and to revise
S20.2.1.1, S20.2.2.1, and S20.4.2 to
identify only CRSs from subpart C1.
Agency Response: We partially agree
and partially disagree with this
comment. In the NPRM we proposed to
include the following language, for the
belted tests under subpart C: ‘‘Any child
restraint listed in this subpart that does
not have manufacturer instructions for
using it in a rear-facing position is
excluded from use in testing in a belted
rear-facing configuration under
S20.2.1.1(a) and S20.4.2.’’ This
provision already exists in subpart C
with regard to S20.2.1.1(a). We
proposed expanding the exclusion to
S20.4.2 because there are forwardfacing-only CRSs in subpart C that
cannot be belted in a rear-facing
configuration as specified by S20.4.2.
Ferrari’s comment was supportive of the
proposal, and we received no comment
in opposition. We are thus adopting the
proposed language in the final rule.
However, FMVSS No. 208, S20.2.2.1, is
an unbelted rear-facing configuration
test that includes forward-facing-only
CRSs as a misuse condition. Since this
is an unbelted test, belt routing is not an
issue, so forward-facing-only CRSs are
not excluded from testing under this
rear-facing configuration test. Such an
exclusion was not part of the NPRM.
We are not incorporating Ferrari’s
recommendation to create two subcategories in Subpart C in this
rulemaking, but we will consider it
when undertaking future updates of
Appendix A.
In its comment on the proposal to
adopt the Angel Guard Angel Ride
AA2403FOF car bed into Appendix A,
TRW was concerned that due to the
large size of the car bed, some vehicles
may not have enough seat belt length to
reach around this CRS with the vehicle
seat fully forward. TRW recommended
that FMVSS No. 208 state that when the
vehicle seat belt length is insufficient to
reach around a CRS, the vehicle seat is
to be moved to the first position
rearward of full forward where the seat
belt will go around the CRS.
Agency Response: We agree to add a
provision to FMVSS No. 208 to address
this concern. However, we note that
TRW did not identify whether it was
expressing concern about the belt length
of a specific vehicle. FMVSS No. 208,
S7.1, requires seat belt assemblies to
accommodate a 95th percentile adult
male with the seat in any position. That
standard defines the hip circumference
of a 95th percentile adult male as being
47.2 inches (in). The Angel Guard car
bed is approximately 53.75 in around its
perimeter (based on a width of 21.75 in
and two depth measurements of 16 in).
While the car bed appears to require 7
in of additional webbing, many vehicle
manufacturers provide additional belt
length beyond the minimum required by
the FMVSS. According to 2007 and
2008 ‘‘Buying a Safer Car’’
information,22 manufacturers that
provide longer seat belts typically
provide an average of 24.67 in of extra
belt length for the right front passenger
position. However, for those vehicles
that may not have sufficient webbing to
reach around the Angel Guard with the
seat in the full forward position, we are
amending FMVSS No. 208, S20.2.3.2(a),
to provide a provision similar to the one
in FMVSS No. 208, S20.1.2, which
allows the seat to be moved rearward if
21 In the May 12, 2000 Advanced Air Bag Rule,
NHTSA acknowledged that some consumers do use
rolled up towels or blankets and that manufacturers
may need to address this in designing their
advanced air bag systems. The agency stated: ‘‘We
note that seat-based systems may, however, need to
‘read’ the presence of a rear-facing infant restraint
that has been stabilized with a rolled up towel or
blanket in accordance with the restraint
manufacturer’s instructions. While we will not use
such objects in conducting our compliance tests,
the presence of a towel or blanket under the most
rearward portion of the child restraint is a real
world scenario which some seat-based systems may
need to accommodate.’’ However, for purposes of
conducting our compliance tests, as explained
above we do not use the towels or blankets.
22 https://www.safercar.gov.
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d. Specifying the Type of Harness Used
for Testing
TRW recommends clarifying which
type of harness/belt type should be used
when testing the CRSs because different
types may have been available for the
same model number.
Agency Response: We disagree. In the
NPRM preamble we specified the
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harness type for the CRSs proposed in
Table 1 for the reader’s convenience.
Since the harness type is not an
influencing factor in suppression or
LRD test results, the harness types
specified were just an indication of the
type present in the CRSs evaluated, for
illustration purposes. The specifications
were not intended to be and are not
binding as to the specific harness type
with which the agency must test. This
final rule also specifies in the preamble
the harness type for the CRSs newly
added to Appendix A for the reader’s
convenience, and is not meant to
require that the CRS with only that type
of harness type would be used for
compliance testing.
VIII. Suggestions for Future
Amendments
Commenters made a number of
suggestions for improving the ease and
timeliness of future amendments to
Appendix A and for selecting the CRSs
that should be included in the
appendix. The more significant
suggestions are addressed below.
a. Publishing a Yearly Bulletin
AORC and TRW suggested the agency
should work with CRS manufacturers to
publish a ‘‘Bulletin’’ annually, which
lists suitable equivalent model numbers
and/or names to those listed in the
appendix.
Agency Response: We do not consider
an annual bulletin published by NHTSA
necessary or appropriate at this time.
For today’s final rule we made every
effort to ensure that the CRS models we
are including in Appendix A will be
available, such as by making sure the
model numbers we list do not refer to
features immaterial to the purposes of
the appendix, such as a soft good (i.e.,
upholstery, fabric) design. This does not
preclude industry from working
together to identify equivalent CRS
models and publishing a yearly bulletin
for industry to use.
mstockstill on PROD1PC66 with RULES
b. Meaning of ‘‘Available for Purchase’’
The Alliance stated that even if the
agency adopts the changes to Appendix
A proposed in the NPRM,
it will still be possible that some of the CRSs
listed on the revised Appendix A that is
ultimately adopted will not be available at
the time the final rule is published. The
Alliance urges NHTSA to confirm that if that
scenario were to occur, it will continue its
policy, first articulated in its November 19,
2003 notice, to ‘not use the unavailable or
altered CRS for compliance testing, and the
manufacturers would likewise be relieved of
any burden to procure the CRS or use it to
test for suppression.’ [Footnote omitted.] 68
FR at 65188. Moreover, the Alliance urges the
agency to confirm that for a CRS listed on
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any amended version of Appendix A to be
deemed ‘available for purchase’ (which is the
term NHTSA used in the November 2003
notice), it must be available from its
manufacturer on the date of publication of
the final rule promulgating the amendment—
as reflected by the manufacturer’s Web site
or other product information. [Emphasis in
text.]
Agency Response: We do not agree
that the term ‘‘available for purchase’’
means that the child restraint must be
available from its manufacturer. The
agency considers CRSs to be available
for purchase if it can be purchased from
any source. Consumers have available to
them a multitude of ways of acquiring
child restraints in today’s marketplace
and we believe that the appendix
should reflect such real-world
acquisition of the restraints, since
consumers could reasonably acquire
and use the restraint with the advanced
air bag system. In addition, after
consideration of the statements made in
the November 19, 2003 final rule that
we would not use a CRS for compliance
testing if it were ‘‘unavailable or
altered’’ on the date of publication of
the final rule adopting it into Appendix
A, we have concluded that the
statement has been overtaken by events
in today’s context. We cannot imagine a
situation where a new CRS that has
been added to the appendix will have
undergone a significant design change
between the time of the proposal and
the final rule. CRSs adopted into the
appendix are highly unlikely to be
unavailable or altered on the date of
publication of the final rule adopting
them into the appendix since NHTSA
works closely with CRS manufacturers
to ensure that newly added CRSs are not
slated to be unavailable or altered so
close in time to the publication of the
final rule. Furthermore, if a CRS differs
so much on the day of publication of a
rule from the CRS that the agency had
proposed and intended to adopt, that
situation should be addressed in a
rulemaking proceeding that would
remove the CRS from the appendix or
reconsider the merits of its inclusion.
For these reasons, we decline to take the
narrow view of ‘‘available for purchase’’
suggested by the Alliance.
In the NPRM we acknowledged that
we were aware that some of the
proposed CRSs would likely change
model numbers before the publication
of this final rule. Therefore, for this final
rule, we have verified the model
numbers with the CRS manufacturers
and the model numbers of some of the
CRSs have been updated to reflect the
latest information available from the
CRS manufacturers.
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c. Developing ‘‘Standard’’ Models of
CRSs
TRW recommended the agency
consider working with CRS
manufacturers to develop ‘‘standard’’
models of each of the CRSs in the
appendix. The ‘‘standard’’ CRS would
be based on a typical model offered for
sale by the CRS manufacturer, but
would not be subject to change or
obsolescence by the manufacturer
without notification to the agency and
would not be for sale to the public and
would be sold only for the purpose of
testing and development.
Agency Response: We have
considered a similar approach in the
past, which we have called the surrogate
approach, and have noted some
concerns with it. In the November 2003
final rule (68 FR at 65189), we stated
that surrogates—
do not attempt to represent dimensional
outliers * * * they cannot ensure the
robustness of an automatic suppression
system under real world conditions * * *
Additionally, without amending FMVSS No.
213 to require restraints to be dimensionally
similar to the surrogates, there is no
assurance that the surrogates will continue to
represent even the average dimensions of
restraints on the market.
We continue to have these concerns
with surrogates. Also, updating the
appendix serves the dual purposes of
finding replacement CRSs for those that
have become unavailable, and of
ensuring that the CRSs listed are
representative of those on the market.
While developing ‘‘standard’’ models
would address the availability problems
associated with the dynamic nature of
the CRS industry, it does not address
the identification of new trends or
outliers or the representation of average
CRSs on the market. Furthermore, such
an effort would require a major
commitment from the CRS
manufacturers and there is no
indication that they would be willing or
able to pursue such an effort at this
time.
d. Define ‘‘Model’’ in Child Restraint
System Standard
AORC and TRW suggested adopting a
formal ‘‘model’’ designation system for
child restraints in FMVSS No. 213 (49
CFR 571.213) similar to FMVSS No.
209, S4.1(j), to better track any changes
to child restraint models that might
affect performance in a suppression or
LRD test. FMVSS No. 209 requires that
each seat belt assembly be permanently
and legibly marked or labeled with,
among other things, information on the
‘‘model’’ of the assembly. FMVSS No.
209 also states that a ‘‘model’’ shall
consist of a single combination of
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webbing having a specific type of fiber
weave and construction, and hardware
having a specific design, and that
webbings of various colors may be
included under the same model. The
commenters stated that FMVSS No. 213
could be amended to define a ‘‘child
restraint model,’’ in the following
manner: ‘‘A model shall consist of a
single combination of shell, base,
harness, and vehicle attachment
hardware/provisions/routing having a
specific design. Webbing and seat
upholstery of various colors may be
included under the same model.’’
Agency Response: The suggestions
raised by the commenters will be kept
in mind when addressing future
Appendix A rulemakings. We note that
FMVSS No. 213, S5.5, already requires
child restraints to be labeled with the
model name or number. Normally, the
CRS manufacturers, for their own
tracking purposes, indicate with a stamp
on the mold or some other type of visual
indication when a mold change has
been made.
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e. Rear-Facing CRSs With High Profiles
Safe Ride News believed that a low
seat back height for rear-facing CRSs is
an important factor for LRD testing and
so, the commenter stated, it is important
to include in Appendix A rear-facing
CRSs with low profiles. According to
the commenter, we should ensure that
the appendix include restraints that can
be used without a base because
restraints with a base tended to have a
higher profile.
Agency Response: Seat back height
was one of the parameters used by the
agency in selecting CRSs for Appendix
A. All the rear-facing CRSs in the
revised Appendix A come with a base
and can be used with or without the
base for the purposes of compliance
testing. Appendix A has rear-facing and
convertible CRSs with seat back heights
that range from 12.75 to 27 in.23 24 The
rear-facing CRSs we are adding to the
appendix diversify the spectrum of seat
back heights.
We note that contrary to the
commenter’s belief, agency LRD testing
on different car types has indicated that
CRSs with high seat back heights can for
some designs provide higher injury
values than the low profile CRSs.
Accordingly, we are keeping CRSs with
high seat back heights in our test
program.
23 The upper end of the spectrum (27 in)
represents convertible CRSs, which have higher seat
back heights than rear-facing-only CRSs.
24 The height measurement used for the rearfacing CRSs is the height with their base.
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IX. Specification of a Manufactured On
or After Date for the Newly Added
CRSs
In Appendix A–1 we have
incorporated the NPRM date, September
25, 2007, as the ‘‘manufactured on or
after’’ date for the newly added CRSs.
This is to distinguish these CRSs from
others that may have been manufactured
prior to the September date and which
may have had slight design differences.
(The agency is taking this step only as
a precaution; we do not know of any
such differences between like-model
CRSs manufactured before September
25, 2007 and those studied by the
agency and discussed in the NPRM.)
The CRSs that are unaffected by this
rulemaking are maintaining the
December 1, 1999 date.
X. Rulemaking Analyses and Notices
Executive Order 12866 and DOT
Regulatory Policies and Procedures
This rulemaking document was not
reviewed by the Office of Management
and Budget under E.O. 12866. It is not
considered to be significant under E.O.
12866 or the Department’s Regulatory
Policies and Procedures (44 FR 11034;
February 26, 1979). The costs and
benefits of advanced air bags are
discussed in the agency’s Final
Economic Assessment for the May 2000
final rule (Docket 7013). The cost and
benefit analysis provided in that
document would not be affected by this
final rule, since this final rule only
adjusts and updates the CRSs used in
test procedures of that final rule. The
minimal impacts of today’s amendment
do not warrant preparation of a
regulatory evaluation.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
In compliance with the Regulatory
Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.,
NHTSA has evaluated the effects of this
action on small entities. I hereby certify
that this final rule will not have a
significant impact on a substantial
number of small entities. This rule
affects motor vehicle manufacturers,
multistage manufacturers and alterers,
but the entities that qualify as small
businesses will not be significantly
affected by this rulemaking because they
are already required to comply with the
advanced air bag requirements. This
final rule does not establish new
requirements, but instead only adjusts
and updates the CRSs used in test
procedures of that final rule.
Executive Order 13132
NHTSA has examined today’s final
rule pursuant to Executive Order 13132
(64 FR 43255, August 10, 1999) and
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concluded that no additional
consultation with States, local
governments or their representatives is
mandated beyond the rulemaking
process. The agency has concluded that
the rulemaking does not have federalism
implications because this final rule does
not have ‘‘substantial direct effects on
the States, on the relationship between
the national government and the States,
or on the distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government.’’
Further, no consultation is needed to
discuss the preemptive effect of today’s
rulemaking. NHTSA rules can have
preemptive effect in at least two ways.
First, the National Traffic and Motor
Vehicle Safety Act contains an express
preemptive provision: ‘‘When a motor
vehicle safety standard is in effect under
this chapter, a State or a political
subdivision of a State may prescribe or
continue in effect a standard applicable
to the same aspect of performance of a
motor vehicle or motor vehicle
equipment only if the standard is
identical to the standard prescribed
under this chapter.’’ 49 U.S.C.
30103(b)(1). It is this statutory command
that preempts State law, not today’s
rulemaking, so consultation would be
inappropriate.
Second, in addition to the express
preemption noted above, the Supreme
Court has also recognized that State
requirements imposed on motor vehicle
manufacturers, including sanctions
imposed by State tort law, can stand as
an obstacle to the accomplishment and
execution of a NHTSA safety standard.
When such a conflict is discerned, the
Supremacy Clause of the Constitution
makes their State requirements
unenforceable. See Geier v. American
Honda Motor Co., 529 U.S. 861 (2000).
NHTSA has not discerned any potential
State requirements that might conflict
with the final rule, however, in part
because such conflicts can arise in
varied contexts. We cannot completely
rule out the possibility that such a
conflict may become apparent in the
future through subsequent experience
with standard. NHTSA may opine on
such conflicts in the future, if
warranted.
National Environmental Policy Act
NHTSA has analyzed this final rule
for the purposes of the National
Environmental Policy Act. The agency
has determined that implementation of
this action would not have any
significant impact on the quality of the
human environment.
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Paperwork Reduction Act
Under the Paperwork Reduction Act
of 1995, a person is not required to
respond to a collection of information
by a Federal agency unless the
collection displays a valid OMB control
number. This final rule contains a
collection of information because of the
phase-in reporting requirements being
established. There is no burden to the
general public. We will be submitting a
request for OMB clearance for the
collection of information required under
today’s final rule.
These requirements and our estimates
of the burden to vehicle manufacturers
are as follows:
NHTSA estimates there are 21
manufacturers of passenger cars,
multipurpose passenger vehicles,
trucks, and buses having a GVWR of
3,856 kg (8,500 lb) or less.
NHTSA estimates that the annual
reporting and recordkeeping burden on
each manufacturer resulting from the
collection of information is one (1) hour.
NHTSA estimates that the annual cost
burden on each manufacturer, in U.S.
dollars, on each manufacturer will be
$35. No additional resources will be
expended by vehicle manufacturers to
gather annual production information
because they already compile this data
for their own use.
The purpose of the reporting
requirements will be to aid NHTSA in
determining whether a manufacturer
has complied with the requirements of
FMVSS No. 208 during the phase-in of
today’s requirements.
National Technology Transfer and
Advancement Act
Under the National Technology
Transfer and Advancement Act of 1995
(NTTAA) (Public Law 104–113), ‘‘all
Federal agencies and departments shall
use technical standards that are
developed or adopted by voluntary
consensus standards bodies, using such
technical standards as a means to carry
out policy objectives or activities
determined by the agencies and
departments.’’ There are no voluntary
consensus standards that address the
CRSs that should be included in
Appendix A.
mstockstill on PROD1PC66 with RULES
Executive Order 12988
With respect to the review of the
promulgation of a new regulation,
section 3(b) of Executive Order 12988,
‘‘Civil Justice Reform’’ (61 FR 4729,
February 7, 1996) requires that
Executive agencies make every
reasonable effort to ensure that the
regulation: (1) Clearly specifies the
preemptive effect; (2) clearly specifies
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the effect on existing Federal law or
regulation; (3) provides a clear legal
standard for affected conduct, while
promoting simplification and burden
reduction; (4) clearly specifies the
retroactive effect, if any; (5) adequately
defines key terms; and (6) addresses
other important issues affecting clarity
and general draftsmanship under any
guidelines issued by the Attorney
General. This document is consistent
with that requirement.
Pursuant to this Order, NHTSA notes
as follows: The preemptive effect of this
final rule is discussed above. NHTSA
notes further that there is no
requirement that individuals submit a
petition for reconsideration or pursue
other administrative proceeding before
they may file suit in court.
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
The Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
of 1995 requires agencies to prepare a
written assessment of the costs, benefits
and other effects of proposed or final
rules that include a Federal mandate
likely to result in the expenditure by
State, local or tribal governments, in the
aggregate, or by the private sector, of
more than $100 million annually
(adjusted for inflation with base year of
1995). This final rule will not result in
expenditures by State, local or tribal
governments, in the aggregate, or by the
private sector in excess of $100 million
annually.
Executive Order 13045
Executive Order 13045 (62 FR 19885,
April 23, 1997) applies to any rule that:
(1) Is determined to be ‘‘economically
significant’’ as defined under E.O.
12866, and (2) concerns an
environmental, health, or safety risk that
NHTSA has reason to believe may have
a disproportionate effect on children.
This rulemaking is not subject to the
Executive Order because it is not
economically significant as defined in
E.O. 12866.
Executive Order 13211
Executive Order 13211 (66 FR 28355,
May 18, 2001) applies to any
rulemaking that: (1) Is determined to be
economically significant as defined
under E.O. 12866, and is likely to have
a significantly adverse effect on the
supply of, distribution of, or use of
energy; or (2) that is designated by the
Administrator of the Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs as a
significant energy action. This
rulemaking is not subject to E.O. 13211.
Plain Language
Executive Order 12866 and the
President’s memorandum of June 1,
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1998, require each agency to write all
rules in plain language. Application of
the principles of plain language
includes consideration of the following
questions:
• Have we organized the material to
suit the public’s needs?
• Are the requirements in the rule
clearly stated?
• Does the rule contain technical
language or jargon that isn’t clear?
• Would a different format (grouping
and order of sections, use of headings,
paragraphing) make the rule easier to
understand?
• Would more (but shorter) sections
be better?
• Could we improve clarity by adding
tables, lists, or diagrams?
• What else could we do to make the
rule easier to understand?
If you have any responses to these
questions, please write to us at the
address provided at the beginning of
this document.
Regulation Identifier Number (RIN)
The Department of Transportation
assigns a regulation identifier number
(RIN) to each regulatory action listed in
the Unified Agenda of Federal
Regulations. The Regulatory Information
Service Center publishes the Unified
Agenda in April and October of each
year. You may use the RIN contained in
the heading at the beginning of this
document to find this action in the
Unified Agenda.
Privacy Act
Anyone is able to search the
electronic form of all comments
received into any of our dockets by the
name of the individual submitting the
comment (or signing the comment, if
submitted on behalf of an association,
business, labor union, etc.). You may
review DOT’s complete Privacy Act
Statement in the Federal Register
published on April 11, 2000 (Volume
65, Number 70; Pages 19477–78).
List of Subjects
49 CFR Part 571
Imports, Incorporation by reference,
Motor vehicle safety, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Tires.
49 CFR Part 585
Motor vehicle safety, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements
■ In consideration of the foregoing,
NHTSA amends 49 CFR Chapter V as
set forth below.
PART 571—FEDERAL MOTOR
VEHICLE SAFETY STANDARDS
1. The authority citation for Part 571
continues to read as follows:
■
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Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 219 / Wednesday, November 12, 2008 / Rules and Regulations
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 322, 30111, 30115,
30117 and 30166; delegation of authority at
49 CFR 1.50.
2. Section 571.208 is amended by
adding S14.8, revising S19.2.1,
S19.2.2(d), S20.1.1, the introductory text
of S20.2.1.1, S20.2.1.6.1(e), S20.2.2.1,
S20.2.3.1, S20.2.3.2(a), S20.4.2, S21.2.1,
S22.1.1, S22.2.1.4(a), S22.2.1.6.1(f),
S23.2.1, and S24.1.1.
■ 3. Section 571.208 is amended by
revising Appendix A, by adding
Appendix A–1 after Appendix A, and
by moving Figures A1 and A2 that are
now at the end of Appendix A to follow
Appendix A–1.
■ 4. Section 571.208 is amended by
revising the headings of Figures A1 and
A2 that are now placed after Appendix
A–1.
The amended and added text,
appendices, and figures read as follows:
■
§ 571.208 Standard No. 208; Occupant
crash protection.
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*
*
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*
*
S14.8 Vehicles manufactured on or
after September 1, 2009 and before
September 1, 2010. Vehicles
manufactured on or after September 1,
2009 and before September 1, 2010,
shall comply with S14.8.1 through
S14.8.4. At any time during the
production year ending August 31,
2010, each manufacturer shall, upon
request from the Office of Vehicle Safety
Compliance, provide information
identifying the vehicles by make, model
and vehicle identification number that
have been certified as complying with
S19, S21, and S23 (in addition to the
other requirements specified in this
standard) when using the child restraint
systems specified in Appendix A–1 of
this standard. The manufacturer’s
designation of a vehicle as meeting the
requirements when using the child
restraint systems in Appendix A–1 of
this standard is irrevocable.
S14.8.1 Subject to S14.8.2, for
vehicles manufactured on or after
September 1, 2009, the number of
vehicles certified as complying with
S19, S21, and S23 when using the child
restraint systems specified in Appendix
A–1 of this standard shall be not less
than 50 percent of:
(a) The manufacturer’s average annual
production of vehicles subject to S19,
S21, and S23 of this standard
manufactured on or after September 1,
2006 and before September 1, 2009; or
(b) The manufacturer’s production of
vehicles subject to S19, S21, and S23
manufactured on or after September 1,
2009 and before September 1, 2010.
S14.8.2 For the purpose of
calculating average annual production
of vehicles for each manufacturer and
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the number of vehicles manufactured by
each manufacturer under S14.8.1, a
vehicle produced by more than one
manufacturer shall be attributed to a
single manufacturer as provided in
S14.8.2(a) through (c), subject to
S14.8.3.
(a) A vehicle which is imported shall
be attributed to the importer.
(b) A vehicle manufactured in the
United States by more than one
manufacturer, one of which also
markets the vehicle, shall be attributed
to the manufacturer which markets the
vehicle.
(c) A vehicle produced by more than
one manufacturer shall be attributed to
any one of the vehicle’s manufacturers
specified by an express written contract,
reported to the National Highway
Traffic Safety Administration under 49
CFR part 585, between the manufacturer
so specified and the manufacturer to
which the vehicle would otherwise be
attributed under S14.8.2(a) or (b).
S14.8.3 For the purposes of
calculating average annual production
of vehicle for each manufacturer and the
number of vehicles by each
manufacturer under S14.8.1, each
vehicle that is excluded from the
requirement to test with child restraints
listed in Appendix A or A–1 of this
standard is not counted.
S14.8.4 Until September 1, 2011,
vehicles manufactured by a final-stage
manufacturer or alterer could be
certified as complying with S19, S21,
and S23 when using the child restraint
systems specified in Appendix A.
Vehicles manufactured on or after
September 1, 2011 by these
manufacturers must be certified as
complying with S19, S21, and S23 when
using the child restraint systems
specified in Appendix A–1.
*
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*
*
S19.2.1 The vehicle shall be
equipped with an automatic
suppression feature for the passenger air
bag which results in deactivation of the
air bag during each of the static tests
specified in S20.2 (using the 49 CFR
Part 572 Subpart R 12-month-old CRABI
child dummy in any of the child
restraints identified in sections B and C
of Appendix A or A–1 of this standard,
as appropriate and the 49 CFR Part 572
Subpart K Newborn Infant dummy in
any of the car beds identified in section
A of Appendix A or A–1, as
appropriate), and activation of the air
bag system during each of the static tests
specified in S20.3 (using the 49 CFR
Part 572 Subpart O 5th percentile adult
female dummy).
S19.2.2 * * *
(d) Shall be located within the interior
of the vehicle and forward of and above
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the design H-point of both the driver’s
and the right front passenger’s seat in
their forwardmost seating positions and
shall not be located on or adjacent to a
surface that can be used for temporary
or permanent storage of objects that
could obscure the telltale from either
the driver’s or right front passenger’s
view, or located where the telltale
would be obscured from the driver’s
view if a rear-facing child restraint
listed in Appendix A or A–1, as
appropriate, is installed in the right
front passenger’s seat.
*
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*
*
S20.1.1 Tests specifying the use of a
car bed, a rear facing child restraint, or
a convertible child restraint may be
conducted using any such restraint
listed in sections A, B, and C,
respectively, of Appendix A or A–1 of
this standard, as appropriate. The car
bed, rear facing child restraint, or
convertible child restraint may be
unused or have been previously used
only for automatic suppression tests. If
it has been used, there shall not be any
visible damage prior to the test.
*
*
*
*
*
S20.2.1.1 The vehicle shall comply
in tests using any child restraint
specified in section B and section C of
Appendix A or A–1 of this standard, as
appropriate, installed in the front
outboard passenger vehicle seat in the
following orientations:
(a) * * *
(b) * * *
*
*
*
*
*
S20.2.1.6.1 * * *
(e) Use the loading device equipped
with the loading foot shown in Figure
A1 and position it as shown in Figure
A2 of Appendix A and Appendix A–1
of this section. The 15±3 degree angle of
the loading device illustrated in Figure
A2 is determined with an initial preload
of 75±25N.
*
*
*
*
*
S20.2.2.1 The vehicle shall comply
in tests using any child restraint
specified in section B and section C of
Appendix A or A–1 of this standard, as
appropriate.
*
*
*
*
*
S20.2.3.1 The vehicle shall comply
in tests using any car bed specified in
section A of Appendix A or A–1 of this
standard, as appropriate.
*
*
*
*
*
S20.2.3.2 * * *
(a) Install the car bed following, to the
extent possible, the car bed
manufacturer’s directions regarding
proper installation of the car bed. If the
seat belt cannot be secured around the
car bed, move the seat rearward to the
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Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 219 / Wednesday, November 12, 2008 / Rules and Regulations
next detent that allows the belt to be
secured around the car bed, or if the seat
is a power seat, using only the control
that primarily moves the seat fore and
aft, move the seat rearward the
minimum distance necessary for the
seat belt to be secured around the car
bed.
*
*
*
*
*
S20.4.2 The vehicle shall comply in
tests using any child restraint specified
in section B and section C of Appendix
A or A–1 of this standard, as
appropriate.
*
*
*
*
*
S21.2.1 The vehicle shall be
equipped with an automatic
suppression feature for the passenger air
bag which results in deactivation of the
air bag during each of the static tests
specified in S22.2 (using the 49 CFR
Part 572 Subpart P 3-year-old child
dummy and, as applicable, any child
restraint specified in section C and
section D of Appendix A or A–1 of this
standard, as appropriate), and activation
of the air bag system during each of the
static tests specified in S22.3 (using the
49 CFR Part 572 Subpart O 5th
percentile adult female dummy).
*
*
*
*
*
S22.1.1 Tests specifying the use of a
forward facing child restraint, including
a booster seat where applicable, may be
conducted using any such restraint
listed in section C and section D of
Appendix A or A–1 of this standard, as
appropriate. The child restraint may be
unused or have been previously used
only for automatic suppression tests. If
it has been used, there shall not be any
visible damage prior to the test. Booster
seats are to be used in the manner
appropriate for a 3-year-old child of the
same height and weight as the 3-yearold child dummy.
*
*
*
*
*
S22.2.1.4 * * *
(a) Using the vehicle safety belts as
specified in S22.2.1.5 with section C
and section D child restraints of
Appendix A or A–1, as appropriate, of
this section designed to be secured to
the vehicle seat even when empty; and
*
*
*
*
*
S22.2.1.6.1 * * *
(f) Use the loading device equipped
with the loading foot shown in Figure
A1 and position it as shown in Figure
A2 of Appendix A and Appendix A–1
of this standard. The 15±3 degree angle
of the loading device is determined with
an initial preload of 75±25 N.
*
*
*
*
*
S23.2.1 The vehicle shall be
equipped with an automatic
suppression feature for the passenger
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frontal air bag system which results in
deactivation of the air bag during each
of the static tests specified in S24.2
(using the 49 CFR Part 572 Subpart N
6-year-old child dummy in any of the
child restraints specified in section D of
Appendix A or A–1 of this standard, as
appropriate), and activation of the air
bag system during each of the static tests
specified in S24.3 (using the 49 CFR
Part 572 Subpart O 5th percentile adult
female dummy).
*
*
*
*
*
S24.1.1 Tests specifying the use of a
booster seat may be conducted using
any such restraint listed in section D of
Appendix A or A–1 of this standard, as
appropriate. The booster seat may be
unused or have been previously used
only for automatic suppression tests. If
it has been used, there shall not be any
visible damage prior to the test. Booster
seats are to be used in the manner
appropriate for a 6-year-old child of the
same height and weight as the 6-yearold child dummy.
*
*
*
*
*
APPENDIX A TO § 571.208—
SELECTION OF CHILD RESTRAINT
SYSTEMS
This Appendix A applies to vehicles
manufactured before September 1, 2009
and to not more than 50 percent of a
manufacturer’s vehicles manufactured
on or after September 1, 2009 and before
September 1, 2010, as specified in S14.8
of this standard. This appendix does not
apply to vehicles manufactured on or
after September 1, 2010.
A. The following car bed,
manufactured on or after December 1,
1999, may be used by the National
Highway Traffic Safety Administration
to test the suppression system of a
vehicle that has been certified as being
in compliance with 49 CFR 571.208
S19:
SUBPART A—CAR BED CHILD
RESTRAINTS OF APPENDIX A
Cosco Dream Ride 02–719.
B. Any of the following rear-facing
child restraint systems specified in the
table below, manufactured on or after
December 1, 1999, may be used by the
National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration to test the suppression
or low risk deployment (LRD) system of
a vehicle that has been certified as being
in compliance with 49 CFR 571.208
S19. When the restraint system comes
equipped with a removable base, the
test may be run either with the base
attached or without the base.
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66799
SUBPART B—REAR-FACING CHILD
RESTRAINTS OF APPENDIX A
Britax Handle with Care 191.
Century Assura 4553.
Century Smart Fit 4543.
Cosco Arriva 02727.
Evenflo Discovery Adjust Right 212.
Evenflo First Choice 204.
Graco Infant 8457.
C. Any of the following forwardfacing child restraint systems, and
forward-facing child restraint systems
that also convert to rear-facing,
manufactured on or after December 1,
1999, may be used by the National
Highway Traffic Safety Administration
to test the suppression or LRD system of
a vehicle that has been certified as being
in compliance with 49 CFR 571.208
S19, or S21. (Note: Any child restraint
listed in this subpart that does not have
manufacturer instructions for using it in
a rear-facing position is excluded from
use in testing in a belted rear-facing
configuration under S20.2.1.1(a) and
S20.4.2):
SUBPART C—FORWARD-FACING AND
CONVERTIBLE CHILD RESTRAINTS OF
APPENDIX A
Century Encore 4612.
Cosco Olympian 02803.
Britax Roundabout 161.
Century STE 1000 4416.
Cosco Touriva 02519.
Evenflo Horizon V 425.
Evenflo Medallion 254.
Safety 1st Comfort Ride 22–400.
D. Any of the following forwardfacing child restraint systems and beltpositioning seats, manufactured on or
after December 1, 1999, may be used by
the National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration as test devices to test the
suppression system of a vehicle that has
been certified as being in compliance
with 49 CFR 571.208 S21 or S23:
SUBPART D—FORWARD-FACING CHILD
RESTRAINTS AND BELT POSITIONING
SEATS OF APPENDIX A
Britax Roadster 9004.
Century Next Step 4920.
Cosco High Back Booster 02–442.
Evenflo Right Fit 245.
APPENDIX A–1 TO § 571.208—
SELECTION OF CHILD SYSTEMS
RESTRAINT
This Appendix A–1 applies to not less
than 50 percent of a manufacturer’s
vehicles manufactured on or after
September 1, 2009 and before
September 1, 2010, as specified in S14.8
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of this standard. This appendix applies
to all vehicles manufactured on or after
September 1, 2010.
A. The following car bed,
manufactured on or after the date listed,
may be used by the National Highway
Traffic Safety Administration to test the
suppression system of a vehicle that has
been certified as being in compliance
with 49 CFR 571.208 S19:
SUBPART A—CAR BED CHILD RESTRAINTS OF APPENDIX A–1
Manufactured on or after
Angel Guard Angel Ride AA2403FOF ...........................................................................................................................
B. Any of the following rear-facing
child restraint systems specified in the
table below, manufactured on or after
the date listed, may be used by the
National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration to test the suppression
or low risk deployment (LRD) system of
a vehicle that has been certified as being
in compliance with 49 CFR 571.208
S19. When the restraint system comes
September 25, 2007.
equipped with a removable base, the
test may be run either with the base
attached or without the base.
SUBPART B—REAR-FACING CHILD RESTRAINTS OF APPENDIX A–1
Manufactured on or after
Century Smart Fit 4543 ..................................................................................................................................................
Cosco Arriva 22–013 PAW and base 22–999 WHO .....................................................................................................
Evenflo Discovery Adjust Right 212 ...............................................................................................................................
Graco Infant 8457 ...........................................................................................................................................................
Graco Snugride ...............................................................................................................................................................
Peg Perego Primo Viaggio SIP IMUN00US ...................................................................................................................
C. Any of the following forwardfacing child restraint systems, and
forward-facing child restraint systems
that also convert to rear-facing,
manufactured on or after the date listed,
may be used by the National Highway
Traffic Safety Administration to test the
suppression or LRD system of a vehicle
that has been certified as being in
compliance with 49 CFR 571.208 S19,
or S21. (Note: Any child restraint listed
in this subpart that does not have
manufacturer instructions for using it in
a rear-facing position is excluded from
December 1, 1999.
September 25, 2007.
December 1, 1999.
December 1, 1999.
September 25, 2007.
September 25, 2007.
use in testing in a belted rear-facing
configuration under S20.2.1.1(a) and
S20.4.2):
Subpart C—Forward-Facing and
Convertible Child Restraints of
Appendix A–1
Manufactured on or after
Britax Roundabout E9L02xx ...........................................................................................................................................
Graco ComfortSport ........................................................................................................................................................
Cosco Touriva 02519 .....................................................................................................................................................
Evenflo Tribute V 379xxxx ..............................................................................................................................................
Evenflo Medallion 254 ....................................................................................................................................................
Cosco Summit Deluxe High Back Booster 22–262 .......................................................................................................
Evenflo Generations 352xxxx .........................................................................................................................................
Graco Toddler SafeSeat Step 2 .....................................................................................................................................
Graco Platinum Cargo ....................................................................................................................................................
Cosco High Back Booster 22–209 .................................................................................................................................
D. Any of the following forwardfacing child restraint systems and beltpositioning seats, manufactured on or
after the date listed, may be used by the
National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration as test devices to test the
suppression system of a vehicle that has
been certified as being in compliance
with 49 CFR 571.208 S21 or S23:
September 25, 2007.
September 25, 2007.
December 1, 1999.
September 25, 2007.
December 1, 1999.
September 25, 2007.
September 25, 2007.
September 25, 2007.
September 25, 2007.
September 25, 2007.
Subpart D—Forward-Facing Child
Restraints and Belt Positioning Seats
of Appendix A–1
mstockstill on PROD1PC66 with RULES
Manufactured on or after
Britax Roadster 9004 ......................................................................................................................................................
Graco Platinum Cargo ....................................................................................................................................................
Cosco High Back Booster 22–209 .................................................................................................................................
Evenflo Right Fit 245 ......................................................................................................................................................
Evenflo Generations 352xxxx .........................................................................................................................................
Cosco Summit Deluxe High Back Booster 22–262 .......................................................................................................
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December 1, 1999
September 25, 2007
September 25, 2007
December 1, 1999
September 25, 2007
September 25, 2007
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 219 / Wednesday, November 12, 2008 / Rules and Regulations
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 322, 30111, 30115,
30117, and 30166; delegation of authority at
49 CFR 1.50.
4. Part 585 is amended by revising
Subpart D to read as follows:
■
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Subpart D—Appendix A–1 of FMVSS No.
208 Phase-in Reporting Requirements
585.31
585.32
585.33
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Purpose
Applicability
Frm 00087
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585.34
585.35
585.36
585.37
*
Definitions
Response to inquiries
Reporting requirements
Records
*
*
§ 585.31
*
*
Scope.
This part establishes requirements for
manufacturers of passenger cars, and of
trucks, buses and multipurpose
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PART 585—PHASE-IN REPORTING
REQUIREMENTS
ER12NO08.009
3. The authority citation for part 585
continues to read as follows:
■
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Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 219 / Wednesday, November 12, 2008 / Rules and Regulations
passenger vehicles with a gross vehicle
weight rating (GVWR) of 3,856
kilograms (kg) (8,500 pounds (lb)) or
less, to submit a report, and maintain
records related to the report, concerning
the number of such vehicles that are
certified as complying with S19, S21,
and S23 of FMVSS No. 208 (49 CFR
571.208) when using the child restraint
systems specified in Appendix A–1 of
this standard.
§ 585.32
Purpose.
The purpose of these reporting
requirements is to assist the National
Highway Traffic Safety Administration
in determining whether a manufacturer
has complied with the requirements of
Standard No. 208 when using the child
restraint systems specified in Appendix
A–1 of that standard.
§ 585.33
Applicability.
This part applies to manufacturers of
passenger cars, and of trucks, buses and
multipurpose passenger vehicles with a
GVWR of 3,856 kg (8,500 lb) or less.
§ 585.34
Definitions.
(a) All terms defined in 49 U.S.C.
30102 are used in their statutory
meaning.
(b) Bus, gross vehicle weight rating or
GVWR, multipurpose passenger vehicle,
passenger car, and truck are used as
defined in § 571.3 of this chapter.
(c) Production year means the 12month period between September 1 of
one year and August 31 of the following
year, inclusive.
(d) Limited line manufacturer means
a manufacturer that sells three or fewer
carlines, as that term is defined in 49
CFR 583.4, in the United States during
a production year.
§ 585.35
Response to inquiries.
At any time during the production
year ending August 31, 2010, each
manufacturer shall, upon request from
the Office of Vehicle Safety Compliance,
provide information identifying the
vehicles (by make, model and vehicle
identification number) that have been
certified as complying with the
requirements of Standard No. 208 when
using the child restraint systems
specified in Appendix A–1 of that
standard. The manufacturer’s
designation of a vehicle as a certified
vehicle is irrevocable.
mstockstill on PROD1PC66 with RULES
§ 585.36
Reporting Requirements.
(a) Phase-in reporting requirements.
Within 60 days after the end of the
production year ending August 31,
2010, each manufacturer shall submit a
report to the National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration concerning its
compliance with requirements of
VerDate Aug<31>2005
18:26 Nov 10, 2008
Jkt 217001
Standard No. 208 when using the child
restraint systems specified in Appendix
A–1 of that standard for its vehicles
produced in that year. Each report shall
provide the information specified in
paragraph (b) of this section and in
section 585.2 of this part.
(b) Phase-in report content—
(1) Basis for phase-in production
goals. Each manufacturer shall provide
the number of vehicles manufactured in
the current production year, or, at the
manufacturer’s option, in each of the
three previous production years. A new
manufacturer that is, for the first time,
manufacturing passenger cars, trucks,
multipurpose passenger vehicles or
buses for sale in the United States must
report the number of passenger cars,
trucks, multipurpose passenger vehicles
or buses manufactured during the
current production year.
(2) Production of complying vehicles.
Each manufacturer shall report on the
number of vehicles that meet the
requirements of Standard No. 208 when
using the child restraint systems
specified in Appendix A–1 of that
standard.
§ 585.37
Records.
Each manufacturer shall maintain
records of the Vehicle Identification
Number for each vehicle for which
information is reported under § 585.36
until December 31, 2013.
Issued on: October 30, 2008.
David Kelly,
Acting Administrator.
[FR Doc. E8–26812 Filed 11–10–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–59–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Surface Transportation Board
49 CFR Part 1244
[STB Ex Parte No. 385 (Sub-No. 6)]
Waybill Sample
Surface Transportation Board.
Final Rule.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
SUMMARY: The Board is adopting a final
rule to require all carriers that submit
carload-waybill-sample information
(Waybill Sample) under 49 CFR 1244 to
report fuel surcharge revenue in a
separate waybill field created by the
Board for that purpose, commencing
with the Waybill Sample filed for
January 2009. The Board will revise the
waybill-file-record layout to reflect this
change.
DATES: Effective Dates: This regulation
is effective January 1, 2009. The
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Sfmt 4700
incorporation by reference of certain
publications listed in the rule is
approved by the Director of the Federal
Register as of January 1, 2009.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, CONTACT:
Paul Aguiar, (202) 245–0323 or
aguiarp@stb.dot.gov. [Federal
Information Relay Service (FIRS) for the
hearing impaired: 1–800–877–8339.]
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: A carload
waybill is a document describing the
characteristics of an individual rail
shipment: originating and terminating
freight stations, the names of all
railroads participating in the movement,
the points of all railroad interchanges,
the number of cars, the car types,
movement weight in hundredweight,
the commodity, and the freight revenue.
Under 49 CFR Part 1244, a railroad is
required to file a Waybill Sample for all
line-haul revenue waybills terminating
on its lines if, in any of the three
preceding years, the railroad terminated
4,500 or more carloads, or it terminated
at least 5% of the total revenue carloads
that terminate in a particular state.
The Waybill Sample is the Board’s
primary source of information about
freight rail shipments terminated in the
United States. Of particular importance,
the Board relies on the data in the
‘‘Total Freight LH Revenue’’ (also
referred to as ‘‘Freight Revenue’’) field
to compute its ‘‘Revenue Shortfall
Allocation Method’’ (RSAM)
benchmarks. The RSAM benchmarks,
which are used in adjudicating certain
rate disputes, measure how much a
carrier would need to charge its
potentially captive traffic in order to
obtain adequate revenues overall.
In the last few years, questions have
been raised about how railroads
reported fuel surcharge revenue in the
Waybill Sample. The Board sought to
address those questions, and to provide
for consistency in the reporting of fuel
surcharge revenue in the Waybill
Sample, by clarifying that all railroads
that are required to submit a Waybill
Sample under 49 CFR Part 1244 should
report fuel surcharge revenue as part of
total freight revenue in the ‘‘Freight
Revenue’’ field in the waybill-file-record
layout. Waybill Sample, STB Ex Parte
No. 385 (Sub-No. 6) (Clarification)
(published at 72 FR 72000 on December
19, 2007).
In a request for reconsideration filed
on December 31, 2007, the National
Industrial Transportation League (NITL)
argued that the Board’s Clarification
made it more difficult to identify fuel
surcharge revenue in the Waybill
Sample and, therefore, did not promote
transparency as to the use of fuel
surcharges by rail carriers. NITL, with
E:\FR\FM\12NOR1.SGM
12NOR1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 73, Number 219 (Wednesday, November 12, 2008)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 66786-66802]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E8-26812]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
49 CFR Parts 571 and 585
[Docket No. NHTSA-08-0168]
RIN 2127-AK02
Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards; Occupant Crash Protection
AGENCY: National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA),
Department of Transportation (DOT).
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: NHTSA is amending Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard
(FMVSS) No. 208, ``Occupant crash protection,'' to update many of the
child restraint systems (CRSs) listed in Appendix A of the standard.
The CRSs in Appendix A are used by NHTSA to test advanced air bag
suppression or low risk deployment systems, to ensure that the air bag
systems pose no reasonable safety risk to infants and small children in
the real world. The amendments replace the CRSs listed in Appendix A
with CRSs that are more available and more representative of the CRS
fleet currently on the market.
DATES: If you wish to petition for reconsideration of this rule, your
petition must be received by December 29, 2008.
Effective date: The date on which this final rule amends the CFR is
January 12, 2009.
This final rule adopts a one-year phase-in of the requirement to
test with the child restraints in the revised Appendix A. Under the
phase-in, 50 percent of vehicles manufactured on or after September 1,
2009 must be certified as meeting FMVSS No. 208 when tested with the
CRSs on the revised Appendix A, and all vehicles manufactured on or
after September 1, 2010 must be so certified.
ADDRESSES: If you wish to petition for reconsideration of this rule,
you should refer in your petition to the docket number of this document
and submit your petition to: Administrator, National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration, 1200 New Jersey Avenue, SE., West Building,
Washington, DC 20590.
The petition will be placed in the docket. Anyone is able to search
the electronic form of all documents received into any of our dockets
by the name of the individual submitting the comment (or signing the
comment, if submitted on behalf of an association, business, labor
union, etc.). You may review DOT's complete Privacy Act Statement in
the Federal Register published on April 11, 2000 (Volume 65, Number 70;
Pages 19477-78).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Carla Cuentas, Office of
Crashworthiness Standards, Light Duty Vehicle Division (telephone 202-
366-4583, fax 202-493-2739). For legal issues, contact Deirdre Fujita,
Office of Chief Counsel (telephone 202-366-2992, fax 202-366-3820). You
may send mail to these officials at the National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration, U.S. Department of Transportation, 1200 New Jersey
Avenue, SE., West Building, Washington, DC 20590.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Background
II. Factors for Decision-Making
a. Guiding Factors
b. Child Restraint Data
c. Additional Considerations
III. Proposed Changes
IV. Comments and Agency Responses on CRSs in Appendix A
a. Deletions
b. Additions (Identified in Table 1)
1. Proposed Inclusion of Graco Snugride to Subpart B
2. Proposed Inclusion of Peg Perego Primo Viaggio
IMCC00US to Subpart B
3. Proposed Inclusion of the Evenflo Generations 352 to
Subpart C
4. Proposed Inclusion of Cosco Summit Deluxe 22-260 to
Subpart C
5. Proposed Inclusion of the Graco SafeSeat (Step 2)
8B02 to Subpart C
c. Updating Other CRSs in Appendix A (Identified in Table 2)
1. Angel Guard Angel Ride AA2403FOF (Subpart A)
2. Cosco Arriva 22-013 (Subpart B)
3. Britax Roundabout E9L02 (Subpart C)
4. Graco ComfortSport (Subpart C)
5. Evenflo Tribute V Deluxe 379 (Subpart C)
6. Graco Cherished Cargo (Subpart D)
7. Cosco High Back Booster 22-209 (Subpart D)
V. Compliance Date
VI. Early Compliance and Picking and Choosing of CRSs
VII. Testing Issues
a. Positioning of Adjustable Features
b. Testing the Car Bed
c. Testing Forward-Facing-Only CRSs in Rear-Facing
Configurations
d. Specifying the Type Of Harness Used For Testing
VIII. Suggestions for Future Amendments
a. Publishing a Yearly Bulletin
b. Meaning of ``Available for Purchase''
c. Developing ``standard'' models of CRSs
d. Define ``model'' in Child Restraint System Standard
e. Rear-Facing CRSs With High Profiles
IX. Specification of a Manufactured On or After Date for the Newly
Added CRSs
X. Rulemaking Analyses and Notices
This final rule amends FMVSS No. 208 to update the child restraint
systems (CRSs) listed in Appendix A of the standard. The notice of
proposed rulemaking (NPRM) preceding this final rule was published on
September 25, 2007 (72 FR 54402; Docket 2007-28710).
I. Background
FMVSS No. 208 (49 CFR 571.208) requires passenger cars and trucks,
buses, and multipurpose passenger vehicles with a gross vehicle weight
rating (GVWR) of 3,856 kilograms (kg) (8,500 pounds (lb)) or less and
an unloaded vehicle weight of 2,495 kg (5,500 lb) or less to be
equipped with seat belts and frontal air bags for the protection of
vehicle occupants in crashes. While air bags have been very effective
in protecting people in moderate and high speed frontal crashes, there
have been instances in which they have caused serious or fatal injuries
to occupants who were very close to the air bag when it deployed. On
May 12, 2000, NHTSA published a final rule to require that air bags be
designed to create less risk of serious air bag-induced injuries and
provide improved frontal crash protection for all occupants, by means
that include advanced air bag technology (``Advanced Air Bag Rule,'' 65
FR 30680, Docket No. NHTSA 00-7013). Under the Advanced Air Bag Rule,
to minimize the risk to infants and small children from deploying air
bags, manufacturers may suppress an air bag in the presence of a CRS or
provide a low risk deployment (LRD) system.\1\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The LRD option involves deployment of the air bag in the
presence of a Child Restraint Air Bag Interaction (CRABI) test
dummy, representing a 12-month-old child, in a rear-facing child
restraint.
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[[Page 66787]]
To minimize the risk to children, manufacturers relying on an air
bag suppression or LRD system must ensure that the vehicle complies
with the suppression or LRD requirements when tested with the CRSs
specified in Appendix A of the standard. As part of ensuring the
robustness of automatic air bag suppression and LRD systems, NHTSA made
sure that the appendix contained CRSs that represented a large portion
of the CRS market and CRSs with unique size and weight characteristics.
NHTSA also planned regular updates to Appendix A.
On November 19, 2003, in response to petitions for reconsideration
of the May 2000 Advanced Air Bag Rule, the agency published a final
rule that revised Appendix A by adding two CRSs that were equipped with
components that attach to a vehicle's LATCH \2\ system (68 FR 65179,
Docket No. NHTSA 03-16476). The appendix has not been updated since
then.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ ``LATCH'' stands for ``Lower Anchors and Tethers for
Children,'' a term that was developed by child restraint
manufacturers and retailers to refer to the standardized child
restraint anchorage system that vehicle manufacturers must install
pursuant to FMVSS No. 225, Child Restraint Anchorage Systems (49 CFR
Sec. 571.225). The LATCH system is comprised of two lower
anchorages and one tether anchorage. Each lower anchorage is a rigid
round rod or bar onto which the connector of a CRS can be attached.
FMVSS No. 225 does not permit vehicle manufacturers to install LATCH
systems in front designated seating positions unless the vehicle has
an air bag on-off switch meeting the requirements of S4.5.4 of FMVSS
No. 208. Since September 1, 2002, CRSs have been required by FMVSS
No. 213, Child Restraint Systems (49 CFR Sec. 571.213), to have
permanently attached components that enable the CRS to connect to a
LATCH system on a vehicle.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
CRSs in Appendix A
Appendix A is made up of four (4) subparts, subparts A through D.
There are one (1) car bed, seven (7) rear-facing child restraint
systems, nine (9) forward-facing toddler and forward-facing convertible
CRSs and four (4) forward-facing toddler/belt positioning booster
systems currently listed and deemed ``effective'' (i.e., may be used in
compliance testing) in Appendix A.
Subpart A lists a car bed that can be used by the agency
to test the suppression system of a vehicle that is manufactured on or
after the effective date specified in Appendix A and that has been
certified as being in compliance with 49 CFR 571.208, S19.
Subpart B lists rear-facing CRSs that can be used by the
agency to test the suppression system or the LRD capabilities of a
vehicle that is manufactured on or after the effective date and prior
to the termination date specified in the appendix and that has been
certified as being in compliance with 49 CFR 571.208, S19.
Subpart C lists forward-facing toddler and forward-facing
convertible \3\ CRSs that can be used by the agency to test the
suppression system or the LRD capabilities of a vehicle that is
manufactured on or after the effective date and prior to the
termination date specified in the appendix and that has been certified
as being in compliance with 49 CFR 571.208, S19 or S21.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ A convertible CRS is one that converts from a rear-facing
seat to a forward-facing seat. A combination CRS is one that
converts from a forward-facing seat to a booster seat or a CRS that
is a convertible that can also be used as a booster.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subpart D lists forward-facing toddler/belt positioning
booster systems and belt positioning booster systems that can be used
by the agency to test the suppression system capabilities of a vehicle
that is manufactured on or after the effective date and prior to the
termination date specified in the appendix and that has been certified
as being in compliance with 49 CFR 571.208, S21 or S23.
II. Factors for Decision-Making
a. Guiding Factors
The November 2003 FMVSS No. 208 final rule discussed factors that
the agency considers in deciding whether Appendix A should be updated
(68 FR at 65188). NHTSA reviews the appendix to: Maintain a spectrum of
CRSs that is representative of the CRS population in production, ensure
that only relatively current restraints will be used for compliance
testing, determine the availability of the CRSs and determine any
change in design, other than those that are purely cosmetic. (If a
change to a CRS were clearly cosmetic, such as color scheme or
upholstery, the list would not be modified.) \4\ In considering whether
a particular restraint should be in Appendix A, the agency considers
whether the restraint--
\4\ We also stated in the rule that, in considering whether to
amend the appendix, we assess whether a variety of restraint
manufacturers are represented in the appendix, and whether a
combination of restraints are in the appendix. Id. These
considerations bear on our assessment of the degree to which the
CRSs in the appendix are representative of child restraints in the
real world and assess the robustness of advanced air bag systems.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
--Has mass and dimensions representative of many restraints on the
market,
--Has mass and dimensions representing outliers, and
--Has been a high sales volume model.
In developing the 2007 NPRM, NHTSA evaluated data, discussed below,
and systematically evaluated the CRSs in Appendix A. We assessed child
restraint system dimensions, weight (mass) and sales volumes (based on
confidential manufacturers' data) to identify which CRSs have
dimensions that were representative of the average restraint in today's
market, and which were possible outliers, with dimensions, weight \5\
and/or footprints \6\ markedly outside of those of the ``average'' CRS.
In addition, the agency identified which CRSs had high production
totals and, therefore, likely to have the greatest market share
(highest sales volume).
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\5\ Since the CRSs are used to test air bag suppression systems,
it was important to identify which CRSs were the lightest and
heaviest, and those that are representative of the average restraint
in today's market in terms of weight.
\6\ Some air bag suppression systems may have trouble sensing a
CRS if the footprint is shaped in a way that loads the air bag
suppression system sensors or load cells differently than the CRSs
for which the suppression system was designed to recognize.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
b. Child Restraint Data
The data used for the NPRM were obtained from CRS manufacturers and
NHTSA's Ease-of-Use (EOU) consumer information program. The agency's
EOU program started in 2002 in response to the Transportation Recall
Enhancement, Accountability, and Documentation (TREAD) Act, which
directed NHTSA to issue a notice to establish a child restraint safety
rating consumer information program to provide practicable, readily
understandable, and timely information to consumers for use in making
informed decisions in the purchase of child restraints. The EOU program
provides information about child restraints with features that are
easier for consumers to use and install correctly. The EOU program
seeks to evaluate all CRSs available for sale at retail outlets.
The 2006 EOU program assessed 99 different CRSs (including
carryover seats from the previous year that were not changed), selected
from 14 different manufacturers (Docket No. NHTSA-2006-25344). In
addition to those 99 CRSs, data for the CRSs currently listed in
Appendix A were also collected during the 2006 EOU program. These EOU
data were used to determine whether any changes to the appendix were
warranted.
c. Additional Considerations
The agency believes that Appendix A should include CRSs with a
gamut of features that would robustly assess advanced air bag
technologies. Automatic air bag suppression systems suppress the air
bag when a small child or a child in a CRS is placed on the seat, and
enable the air bag's deployment when most adults occupy the seat. With
[[Page 66788]]
respect to CRSs in Appendix A, LRD systems deploy the air bag in the
presence of a CRABI dummy in a rear-facing CRS. The design and
calibration of the advanced air bag system used must perform
satisfactorily with a wide range of CRSs that could be installed in the
vehicle. With that in mind, the NPRM considered the following factors
in choosing CRSs for inclusion in Appendix A.
First, with LRD systems for infants already being used in some
vehicles, the agency sought to include rear-facing child restraints of
varying seat back heights. On the one hand, rear-facing CRSs with
relatively low seat back heights could in some circumstances present a
more challenging test of an LRD system, especially one consisting of an
air bag mounted on the top of the instrument panel, since the back of
the CRS presents less of a reaction surface (resistance). With a low
back, the air bag could fully pressurize and interact in a fully
energized state with the child's head as the bag comes over the top of
the CRS seat back. However, recent agency testing indicates that CRSs
with high backs provide significant performance challenges to infant
LRD systems. Therefore, we sought to include in Appendix A rear-facing
and convertible CRSs with seat back heights that range from 12.75 to 27
in 7 8 to diversify the spectrum of seat back heights.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ The upper end of the spectrum (27 in) represents convertible
CRSs, which have higher seat back heights than rear-facing-only
CRSs.
\8\ The height measurement used for the rear-facing CRSs is the
height with their base.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Second, features such as handles and sunshields of a rear-facing
CRS may complicate and challenge the sensing operation of certain
advanced air bag systems relying on future technologies such as vision-
based advanced air bag systems. To ensure that advanced air bags
perform well with all types of rear-facing CRSs, the agency
purposefully includes in Appendix A rear-facing CRSs that have handles
and sunshields. NHTSA compliance test procedures specify adjustments of
the handles and sunshields to the positions specified in the standard
to ensure the robustness of the advanced air bag system.
Third, since CRSs have been required to have LATCH components since
September 1, 2002, the agency has decided to replace many of the older
non-LATCH CRSs in Appendix A with new equivalent LATCH-equipped CRSs
from the same manufacturer.\9\ On the other hand, when the LATCH
requirement became effective in 2002 for child restraints, CRS
manufacturers did not significantly change CRS structures or designs.
Accordingly, we expect that suppression and LRD systems will react to
LATCH and non-LATCH CRSs similarly. In addition, very few vehicles will
have lower anchors in the front outboard passenger seat.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ The newly added car bed is the only CRS replacement that
came from a different manufacturer.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
III. Proposed Changes
After considering the factors for decision-making discussed in the
previous section of this preamble, NHTSA proposed to delete certain
CRSs from Appendix A and to add others.\10\ The agency noted that some
CRSs undergo annual cosmetic changes that result in different model
numbers for the new version, and that some of the model numbers of the
CRSs in the NPRM could thus be different in the final rule to reflect
the latest model number. The agency docketed a document entitled,
``Technical Assessment of Child Restraint Systems for FMVSS No. 208,
Occupant Crash Protection, Appendix A,'' that includes dimensional
information, pictures, and statistical data on the current CRSs in the
appendix and the CRSs proposed for inclusion in the appendix (Docket
No. 2007-28710-0002) (hereinafter referred to as the 2007 Technical
Assessment).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ We noted in the November 2003 FMVSS No. 208 final rule that
our periodic review of the child restraints in the appendix may
cause the number of CRSs contained therein to change slightly as we
identify different trends in the use of CRSs from prior periods. We
said then that the number of CRSs should not vary by more than 10-20
percent absent any dramatic changes in the design of restraints.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The agency proposed to delete six (6) existing CRSs and to add five
(5) new CRSs (see Table 1 below, which reproduces Table 1 of the NPRM).
The reasons for each proposed deletion or addition were discussed in
detail in the NPRM and readers may refer to the NPRM for that
information (72 FR at 54405-54407). Our proposed deletions were based
generally on CRSs that did not offer any unique characteristics, those
that were produced in the smallest quantities, or those that have not
been in production for some time. If we proposed eliminating a CRS that
offered a unique characteristic, we proposed to replace it with a
similar CRS. Our proposed additions also sought to include more LATCH-
equipped CRSs in the appendix.
In addition, comments were requested on cosmetic replacements of
other CRSs in Appendix A (see Table 2 below, which reproduces Table 2
of the NPRM). The reasons for the updates were discussed in detail in
the NPRM (72 FR at 54407-54408). These changes primarily would update
the older CRSs in the appendix with newer model CRSs that have the same
main physical features as the older restraints. To obtain information
on whether CRSs in Appendix A could be replaced by newer, more
available models with the same relevant physical features as the
Appendix A child restraints, we contacted each manufacturer of the
listed CRS and asked which of their more recently-produced CRSs could
be considered an equivalent replacement for the Appendix A CRS. With
one exception related to the Cosco Dream Ride car bed, manufacturers
were able to suggest a possible replacement.\11\ We decided that the
CRSs in the Appendix that have been out of production the longest
(i.e., the hardest CRSs to acquire for testing purposes) should be
replaced with newer-model CRSs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ Subpart A of the appendix lists the Cosco Dream Ride car
bed which is no longer being manufactured for retail sale. Cosco was
unable to suggest a replacement for this CRS because the
manufacturer no longer sells car beds to the general public (the CRS
is manufactured and sold mainly for special needs accounts). After
consulting with the major CRS manufacturers, we only found one car
bed that is being manufactured, the Angel Guard Angel Ride. We
proposed the Angel Guard Angel Ride as our replacement choice
because the CRS is available to the general public.
Table 1--Summary of Proposed Deletions and Additions to Appendix A
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Name Type Appendix subpart
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Deletions
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Britax Handle With Care 191.
Century Assura 4553.. Rear-Facing...... B.
Century Encore 4612.. Convertible...... C.
Cosco Olympian 02803. Convertible...... C.
[[Page 66789]]
Safety 1st Comfort Ride 22-400.
Britax Expressway ISOFIX...... Forward-Facing... C.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Additions
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Graco Snugride................ Rear-Facing...... B.
Peg Perego Viaggio IMCC00US.
Cosco Summit DX 22- Forward-Facing... C.
260.
Evenflo Generations 352.
Graco Safeseat (Step 2)....... Combination...... C.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table 2--CRSs That Could Be Replaced With Similar, More Recently
Produced Restraints, and What Those Replacements Should Be
------------------------------------------------------------------------
CRS in Appendix
Appendix A subpart A Type of CRS Replacement
------------------------------------------------------------------------
A.................... Cosco Dream Car bed........ Angel Guard
Ride. Angel Ride
AA240
3FOF.
B.................... Cosco Arriva 02- Rear-facing.... Cosco Arriva
727. 22-01
3.
C.................... Britax Convertible.... Britax
Roundabout. Roundabout
E9L02
.
C.................... Century Encore Convertible.... Graco
\12\. ComfortSport.
C.................... Evenflo Horizon Convertible.... Evenflo Tribute
V. 5 Deluxe
379.
D.................... Century Next Combination.... Graco Cherished
Step. Cargo.
D.................... Cosco High Back Booster........ Cosco Hi Back
Booster. Booster 22-209.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
IV. Comments and Agency Responses on CRSs in Appendix A
The agency received comments on the proposal from the Alliance of
Automobile Manufacturers (Alliance),\13\ Porsche Cars North America,
Inc. (Porsche), TRW Automotive (TRW), Ferrari, General Motors (GM), the
Automotive Occupant Restraints Council (AORC), and from community
interest groups Safe Ride News and Traffic Safety Projects. Commenters
overwhelmingly supported the deletions identified in Table 1 and Table
2 and generally supported the proposed additions identified in the
tables, with many suggesting further amendments to Appendix A. Several
commenters raised concerns about the effective date. For example, the
Alliance stated that it believes that as many as possible of the
unavailable CRSs in Appendix A should be replaced with respect to new
vehicle models, but manufacturers should be allowed to continue to
certify previously certified models using the existing version of the
appendix for at least three years.\14\ In contrast, Safe Ride News
expressed concern that the proposed lead time ``could stretch out the
wait before these new CRSs are introduced for testing to Model Year
2010 or later.'' Some commenters asked for clarification of testing
issues, and there were a number of ideas suggested for improving the
ease and timeliness of future amendments to Appendix A and for
selecting the CRSs that should be included in the appendix. These and
other issues are addressed in this and the following sections.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ We later realized that reference to the Encore was in
error.
\13\ The Alliance is made up of BMW group, Chrysler LLC, Ford
Motor Company, General Motors, Mazda, Mitsubishi Motors, Porsche,
Toyota, and Volkswagen.
\14\ In a petition for rulemaking dated April 27, 2007, the
Alliance requested NHTSA to amend FMVSS No. 208 to allow
manufacturers the option of certifying vehicles to any edition of
Appendix A for five model years after the edition first becomes
effective. (In its comment to the September 25, 2007 NPRM, the
Alliance reduced the suggested 5-year compliance period to 3 years
for this effort to revise Appendix A, recognizing that the appendix
has not been amended in several years.)
The petition also requested that the agency commit to amending
the appendix every three years and revise the view the agency
announced in the past that the appendix should be amended annually.
The Alliance believes that annual revisions are not needed to
protect children because experience has shown that, despite the fact
that the appendix has not been amended since 2003, there is no known
incident in which a child in a CRS in the front seat of a vehicle
equipped with advanced air bags received a serious injury due to the
deployment of an air bag. In addition, the Alliance believed that
annual updates to the appendix is inconsistent with the realities of
the automobile industry, because retesting and recertifying existing
vehicle models every year as new CRSs are added to the appendix
would, as the petitioner stated, ``create a tremendous burden on
manufacturers which * * * [in light of the absence of known injuries
to a child caused by an advanced air bag system] would yield little
or no safety benefits.'' The petitioner stated that it recognized
that ``in the event of some unanticipated safety need, such as the
introduction of an entirely new style of CRS that captures a
significant portion of the market, the agency could revise the
appendix--subject to notice and lead time constraints--without
waiting for three years from the prior update.'' The agency is
responding to issues raised in the petition both in this final rule,
and in a separate rulemaking action.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Accompanying this final rule is an updated Technical Assessment of
Child Restraint Systems that we have placed in the docket for this
final rule (``2008 Technical Assessment''). The assessment contains
dimensional information and pictures of the CRSs adopted into Appendix
A by this final rule, and statistical data of past EOU data.
To improve the clarity of the appendix, we have reformatted the
tables of Appendix A and have set forth an Appendix A-1 which
incorporates the revisions adopted by this final rule.
a. Deletions
All commenters supported the proposed deletion of the six CRSs from
Appendix A (described in Table 1, above). No commenter opposed the
deletions. Several commenters suggested that we refresh all the CRSs in
the appendix.
Agency Response: We are adopting the proposed deletions for the
reasons discussed in the NPRM. Regarding the Britax Expressway ISOFIX,
this CRS is removed from Appendix A effective on the date of
publication of this final rule.
Deleting and replacing all the CRSs in the appendix is outside the
scope of the present rulemaking. However, we concur with the view that
circumstances may warrant updating more than 10 to 20 percent of the
number of CRSs in the appendix. The allocation of agency
[[Page 66790]]
resources have hampered our periodic updates of the appendix, so it
could be prudent for a rulemaking, such as today's final rule, to
affect more than 10 to 20 percent of the CRSs in the appendix.
b. Additions (Identified in Table 1)
With the exception of the Peg Perego Viaggio IMCC00US, the
five child restraints that we proposed to add to Appendix A were
supported by commenters. Accordingly, with the exception of the Peg
Perego Viaggio IMCC00US, we are adopting the CRSs for the
reasons provided in the NPRM. However, several commenters had questions
about some of the restraints and requested clarification of the
proposal.
1. Proposed Inclusion of Graco Snugride to Subpart B
GM and the Alliance stated that the NPRM did not provide a model
number in Table 1 or in the proposed regulatory text, while the
preamble and 2007 Technical Assessment denoted model 8643. TRW
noted that it observed that myriad variants of the Snugride exist which
appear to have essentially similar construction to the 8643
model and which would likely perform identically in suppression or LRD
tests.
Agency Response: Our intent was not to provide a model number for
this CRS in the regulatory text. The NPRM mistakenly included the model
number for the Graco Snugride in the preamble and the 2007 Technical
Assessment.
Due to the dynamic nature of the CRS industry, when selecting new
CRSs for the appendix, the agency sought to provide, to the extent
possible, generic model numbers. The agency's intention was to make it
easier for vehicle manufacturers to find the newly added CRSs by
providing model numbers that do not specify patterns for soft goods,
type of padding, etc., i.e., for items that would not affect the
performance of the advanced air bag system. For some CRSs, such as for
Evenflo child restraints, this meant requiring simply a number
prefix,\15\ or just a name, such as for Graco child restraints, but
some CRSs required complete model numbers, such as the child restraints
produced by Cosco. Thus, for the Graco Snugride no model number was
needed.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\15\ In the appendix, the additional numbers following the
prefix are indicated by ``X''s.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. Proposed Inclusion of Peg Perego Primo Viaggio IMCC00US to
Subpart B
Ferrari stated that the model number proposed for this CRS was out
of production and recommended the addition of the new model number
IMUN00US. TRW stated that the rubber inserts in the belt slots of the
Primo Viaggio have a tendency to grab the seat belt webbing, making it
difficult to achieve the maximum 134 N belt tension called for in FMVSS
No. 208.
Agency Response: We agree to include model IMUN00US instead of
IMCC00US. Market data indicate that the model IMCC00US was discontinued
in August 2007 and replaced with the new model name and number Peg
Perego Primo Viaggio SIP IMUN00US. The changes made for the new version
of the Primo Viaggio SIP are a new handlebar shape and more ear/head
padding.
NHTSA installed the Peg Perego Primo Viaggio in seventeen (17)
model year (MY) 2008 vehicles and found that while the rubber inserts
do make it more difficult to achieve the desired belt tension, the
desired belt tension is attainable. We note that, to achieve the
specified load, the CRS base was pre-loaded prior to installing the CRS
onto the base. Since the IMUN00US is similar structurally to the
IMCC00US and the specified FMVSS No. 208 belt tension is achievable
using the IMUN00US, we are adding the Peg Perego Primo Viaggio SIP
IMUN00US to Appendix A. Photographs of the two CRSs can be found in the
2008 Technical Assessment.
3. Proposed Inclusion of the Evenflo Generations 352 to
Subpart C
The NPRM characterized the Evenflo Generations as a convertible
CRS.
GM and the Alliance stated that this CRS was not on the
manufacturer's website. Ferrari and TRW pointed out that this CRS
should be classified as a combination CRS. Ferrari stated that it
supports the addition of the Evenflo Generations only if it will be
exempted from testing in a rearward facing configuration. TRW stated
that there were similar models to the CRS, such as the Generations
3521804.
Agency Response: We are adding the CRS to Appendix A, but we agree
with Ferrari and TRW that this CRS was categorized incorrectly in the
NPRM as a convertible CRS. This CRS is a forward-facing-only
combination CRS. Accordingly, it is listed under the booster car seat
section of the manufacturer's Web site.
As explained earlier in this preamble, for purposes of Appendix A,
Evenflo child restraints can be identified by a generic model number
consisting of a number prefix. The 352 model number provided
in the NPRM was merely a prefix of the intended model number. To avoid
confusion, we have revised the model number to indicate that the actual
model number is several digits long and that the 352 was simply a
prefix. The similar model observed by TRW beginning with the 352 prefix
is thus an acceptable model.
With regard to combination CRSs, Appendix A categories were
developed prior to the development of combination CRSs. Therefore,
there is not a subpart of the appendix specific to these restraints.
These seats can perform as a forward-facing harness restraint as well
as a booster seat using a vehicle's seat belt, so they can technically
accommodate a one-year-old, three-year-old, and six-year-old dummy.
When considering which subpart of the appendix to categorize these
seats, we noted that the FMVSS No. 208 advanced air bag system
requirements do not require combination CRSs in Subpart C to be tested
with the six-year-old dummy. (See FMVSS No. 208, S23.) Therefore, to
ensure adequate testing of all the modes a combination CRS can be used
for, we are listing the Evenflo Generations 352xxxx in both Subparts C
and D of Appendix A.
The agency is responding to Ferrari's comment that the CRS should
only be used in rearward facing configurations in the section of this
preamble entitled, ``Testing Issues.''
4. Proposed Inclusion of Cosco Summit Deluxe 22-260 to Subpart
C
GM stated that it could not find a CRS with the precise name and
model number provided in the NPRM and suggested the Summit Deluxe High
Back Booster Car Seat model 22565 or the Summit High Back Booster Car
Seat model 22260, noting that both have very similar appearance and
look like the CRS in the photograph in the 2007 Technical Assessment.
The Alliance also pointed out that it could not identify any Cosco CRS
with the precise name and model number identified in the NPRM. Ferrari
supported the addition of the Summit Deluxe ``only if it will be
exempted from testing in rearward facing configurations.''
Agency Response: The agency concurs with the GM comment and is
adopting the Cosco Summit Deluxe High Back Booster model 22-262 into
Subparts C and D of the appendix. A picture and measurements of the CRS
can be found in the 2008 Technical Assessment. The agency is responding
to Ferrari's comment that the CRS should only be used in rearward
facing configurations in the section of this preamble entitled,
``Testing Issues.''
[[Page 66791]]
5. Proposed Inclusion of the Graco SafeSeat (Step 2) 8B02 to
Subpart C
The Alliance stated that this CRS was on the manufacturer's Web
site but that the Alliance was advised by Graco that the company has
stopped manufacturing a model with the number or will do so in the very
near future. The Alliance stated that NHTSA should substitute the new
model name/number that Graco will use for this CRS. TRW stated that
Model 8B02 was not found at any of six local large retailers,
while a very similar model 8B05 was found at a local retailer and an
online source was located for this model.
Agency Response: As discussed earlier, we mistakenly included the
model number in the preamble. A model number is not needed. A Graco
representative (see agency ex parte memorandum in the docket for this
final rule) confirmed that Graco model numbers identify only cosmetic
features and that identifying the shell does not necessitate
identifying a model number. Therefore, the Alliance's concerns about
that particular model being discontinued or TRW's concern about not
finding that particular model at large retail stores is not a problem.
(In addition, this CRS was incorrectly categorized as a combination CRS
in Table 1 of the NPRM. As stated in the preamble of that document, the
child restraint is a forward-facing only CRS.) However, we are adding
the word ``Toddler'' to the name because Graco's Web site and the EOU
Web site both list this CRS as the Graco Toddler SafeSeat. Thus, this
final rule adopts the Graco Toddler SafeSeat Step 2.
c. Updating Other CRSs in Appendix A (Identified in Table 2)
Commenters generally supported the seven changes identified in
Table 2 of the NPRM preamble (the same Table 2 above of today's
document).
1. Angel Guard Angel Ride AA2403FOF (Subpart A)
No commenter objected to including this CRS, but TRW stated that it
was unable to find a retail source for this CRS. TRW also expressed
concern about the size of this CRS because, the commenter believed,
vehicles may not have enough seat belt webbing to reach around it with
the vehicle seat fully forward. TRW recommended specifying in FMVSS No.
208 that when the vehicle seat belt lacks the length to reach around a
CRS, the vehicle seat is moved to the ``first position rearward of full
forward where the seat belt will go around the CRS.''
Agency Response: The agency is replacing the Cosco Dream Ride with
the Angel Guard Angel Ride AA2403FOF, a car bed with a 3-point harness,
for the reasons provided in the NPRM. The CRS can be ordered directly
through Angel Guard and through other sources listed on the
manufacturer's Web site (https://www.angel-guard.com). The agency is
responding to TRW's concern about vehicles' having sufficient belt
length to encircle the restraint in the section of this preamble
entitled, ``Testing Issues.''
2. Cosco Arriva 22-013 (Subpart B)
In their comments, GM and the Alliance stated that they could not
find this CRS on the manufacturer's Web site. TRW also could not find
any sources for this CRS and was informed that it is being phased out.
Furthermore, TRW requested clarification on whether the Arriva 02-727
should be tested with its base.
Agency Response: We are adopting the Cosco Arriva 22-
013PAW, a rear-facing CRS with a 5-point harness, to replace its older
counterpart as proposed. The Cosco Arriva 22-013PAW is mainly
distributed to hospitals, health departments, and child safety
businesses or organizations and is not sold at retailers (these CRSs
are called ``institutional CRSs''). However, this CRS is easily
available to the public as it can be ordered through Cosco or its
distributor, National Safety Resources.\16\ We will test the CRS with
the base 22-999WHO.
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\16\ A representative of the manufacturer verified that they are
contemplating phasing out this CRS; however, they said that they
would continue producing it as long as there was a demand for it
(see agency ex parte memorandum in the docket for this final rule).
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3. Britax Roundabout E9L02 (Subpart C)
The only comment received on this CRS was from TRW, which supported
the change. TRW stated that this CRS was found at large retailers.
Agency Response: We are making the proposed change. However, we
will refer to the new restraint as the Britax Roundabout E9L02xx; the
last two digits of the model number are not needed because they
indicate a specific fabric design. The Britax Roundabout E9L02xx is a
convertible CRS with a 5-point harness.
4. Graco ComfortSport (Subpart C)
The NPRM requested comments on replacing the Century Encore with
the Graco ComfortSport. However, the reference to the Century Encore
was a mistake; that CRS was proposed to be deleted from Appendix A.
GM and the Alliance realized the mistake, stating that the Graco
ComfortSport is actually a replacement for the Century STE 1000, not
the Century Encore. In addition, the Alliance asked for the
identification of a model number for the Graco ComfortSport. TRW stated
that it was advised that the model number provided in the 2007
Technical Assessment was recalled and that a new version was becoming
available. TRW noted that it purchased a ComfortSport 8C00 for
evaluation, because it was advised that all ComfortSports have the same
shell.
Agency Response: Commenters are correct that we meant the Graco
ComfortSport to replace the Century STE 1000. (The Century STE 1000 and
the Century Encore have essentially the same shell, thus the
ComfortSport could have replaced either of these CRSs.) No commenter
opposed the addition of the Graco ComfortSport, a convertible CRS with
a 5-point harness. We are thus adopting the proposed change.
As discussed earlier, a model number is not necessary to adequately
identify this Graco CRS. However, we note that several ComfortSport
models produced between January 2, 2007 and August 31, 2007 were
recalled due to possible misrouting of the LATCH belt during assembly.
Graco has assured us that new versions are available and that the model
numbers of the new versions end in the number two (2). However, there
is still no need to specify a model number for this CRS in Appendix A
as no substantive changes were made to the CRS that will affect the
performance of a suppression or LRD system.
5. Evenflo Tribute V Deluxe 379 (Subpart C)
The NPRM requested comments on replacing the Evenflo Horizon V with
the Evenflo Tribute V Deluxe 379. The only comment on this proposed
change was from TRW, which stated that it could not find the Evenflo
Tribute V Deluxe with the model number provided in the NPRM.
Agency Response: As explained above, the ``379'' is just a prefix
that precedes four other digits of the 7-digit model number. We are
clarifying the regulatory text to make this clear. Further, we are
removing the ``Deluxe'' specification because it only designates the
fabric used and the addition of a cup holder, which are features that
will not likely affect the performance of a suppression or LRD system.
Accordingly, this final rule replaces the Evenflo Horizon V with the
Evenflo Tribute V 379xxxx, a convertible CRS with a 5-point harness.
[[Page 66792]]
6. Graco Cherished Cargo (Subpart D)
GM and the Alliance stated that they could not find the Cherished
Cargo on the manufacturer's Web site, although several models that
share the name Cargo do appear. TRW claimed that Graco advised them
that this CRS was discontinued, but that all Cargo models such as the
Platinum, Ultra, etc., use the same shell and are very similar. TRW
recommended we avoid the Cherished Cargo and choose a different, more
readily available model of the Cargo series, such as the Platinum
Cargo.
Agency Response: For the reasons of availability raised by the
commenters, we are replacing the Century Next Step with the Graco
Platinum Cargo, a forward-facing-only combination CRS with a 5-point
harness. It will be listed in both Subparts C and D of the appendix.
Graco has informed NHTSA that the Cherished Cargo was not discontinued,
but that retailers no longer want to carry this CRS in stock (see
agency ex parte memorandum in the docket for this final rule). Graco
also confirmed that the Platinum Cargo has the same shell as the
Cherished Cargo and it is more readily available. As shown in
photographs of the Platinum Cargo and the Cherished Cargo, the CRSs are
interchangeable (see the 2008 Technical Assessment).
7. Cosco High Back Booster 22-209 (Subpart D)
The NPRM requested comments on replacing the Cosco High Back
Booster with the Cosco High Back Booster 22-209. TRW commented that it
could not find this seat at any of the six large retailers it searched.
They found similar models such as the 22-206 at two of the six
retailers.
Agency Response: We are adopting the Cosco High Back Booster 22-
209, a forward-facing only combination CRS with a 5-point harness into
Subparts C and D of the appendix. As of July 28, 2008, the
manufacturer's Web site has a list of retailers for this CRS on its Web
site.
V. Compliance Date
Consistent with statements NHTSA made in the November 19, 2003
FMVSS No. 208 final rule regarding lead time (68 FR at 65188), the
agency proposed that the compliance date for the proposed changes to
Appendix A be the next model year introduced one year after publication
of a final rule modifying Appendix A. The agency believed that the lead
time would be sufficiently long to provide vehicle manufacturers time
to procure the needed child restraints, test vehicles, and certify the
air bag systems to FMVSS No. 208, while ensuring the satisfactory
performance of vehicles' suppression and LRD systems in an expeditious
manner.
This section addresses the following comments relating to the
compliance date.
1. The Alliance agreed that the proposed effective date of
September 1, 2009 (the beginning of the next model year introduced one
year after the anticipated date of publication of the final rule) is
reasonable with respect to new vehicle models and to new child
protection systems that will be utilized for the first time in MY 2010
(or later) vehicles. However, the commenter stated that requiring
vehicle manufacturers to recertify existing vehicles utilizing a
different set of CRSs would impose a tremendous burden on those
manufacturers. The Alliance urged the agency to provide manufacturers
the option of continuing to certify, for at least three years, ``carry-
over'' models that were previously certified to the existing version of
Appendix A. The commenter stated that, on average, over 75 percent of
its members' MY 2010 models will be equipped with ``child protection
systems that are identical to those in the equivalent MY 2009 models.''
The commenter stated that in all likelihood these models will be
certified using the CRSs on the existing Appendix A, and that requiring
them to be certified using the CRSs on the new Appendix would be
extremely burdensome, ``even apart from whether the child protection
systems in those models would need to be redesigned or recalibrated to
assure compliance with the standard.''
Porsche, a member of the Alliance, commented in support of the
Alliance's comments, but added that the model lifespan of Porsche
vehicles is typically longer than the industry norms, lasting for seven
years or more. Thus, Porsche requested that NHTSA allow manufacturers
to use the existing version of Appendix A for up to five years
following the effective date of the final rule.\17\ ``Any shorter time
period would likely result in a significant amount of unnecessary
testing, especially under circumstances when most or many of the child
restraints on the list are being replaced.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\17\ Porsche noted that its request is similar to the petition
for rulemaking from the Alliance requesting NHTSA to provide a five-
year period for carry-over models that were certified to the
existing version of Appendix A.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. GM, an Alliance member, requested that the effective date of the
changes in the final rule be no sooner than September 1, 2010. GM
submitted confidential information that provided an estimate of ``the
amount of work needed to evaluate, potentially modify, and validate''
its carry-over vehicle platforms and believed that the work could not
be completed by ``the next model year introduced one year after
publication of the final rule.'' GM believed that delaying the
effective date until September 1, 2010 would not increase any risks to
safety, because it has no indications ``that there are any CRSs in use
that do not properly classify'' with their advanced air bag systems.
3. Ferrari addressed the effective date for the Table 2 changes.
The commenter stated that there would be an unnecessary burden on the
manufacturers if existing vehicles models already certified to comply
with the old CRSs in Table 2 have to be certified again for compliance
with the new CRSs. Ferrari suggested that NHTSA add a provision to
FMVSS No. 208 stating that if a vehicle manufacturer previously
certified a vehicle model using an older CRS listed in Table 2 and has
so certified prior to the listing of the newer equivalent CRS in
Appendix A, then the vehicle manufacturer does not have to retest said
vehicle model using the newer CRS. Ferrari believed that ``This
approach avoids costly retesting and since the newer CRS is by
definition `equivalent' to the older CRS, there is no negative effect
on safety.''
4. In contrast to the above comments, some comments supported the
proposed effective date or expressed concern that it was too long. TRW
stated that it saw no concerns with the proposed effective date and
believed that it provides sufficient time to adopt the requirements of
the proposed rule. Safe Ride News believed that the proposed effective
date would be ``too long to wait.'' The commenter was concerned that
because the appendix has not been updated in years, it is no longer
representative of heavier CRSs that have been on the market for several
years. Safe Ride News did not consider it an unreasonable request to
shorten the lead-time for manufacturers since the new CRSs will not be
difficult to acquire.
Agency Response: NHTSA acknowledges that there are competing
considerations in updating Appendix A, specifically, the need to have a
representative list while maintaining some stability to minimize the
certification burden. Having the list reflect real-world use of a
variety of child restraints, and ensuring the compatibility of
suppression and LRD systems with those restraints, argue for
[[Page 66793]]
expediency. On the other hand, time constraints and costs associated
with certification burdens resulting from changes to the appendix
dictate that there are limits to how close in time an effective date
can be set. Moreover, as part of the exercise of balancing those
interests, we also consider the actual effect that the change to
Appendix A has on the robustness of the advanced air bag system, i.e.,
whether the change to the appendix will result in an actual real-world
safety improvement.
NHTSA evaluated the 2000-2007 EOU measurement data to determine if
there have been significant shifts in the characteristics of CRSs since
2000 and did not observe any indication of definitive shifts in the CRS
characteristics pertinent to air bag performance. (See 2008 Technical
Assessment.) For the few changes we did observe, the changes do not
appear enough to alter an advanced air bag system's performance. NHTSA
undertook indicant tests of seventeen (17) MY 2008 vehicles to assist
in determining whether the CRSs being added to the appendix would
require manufacturers to redesign their advanced air bag systems. (See
matrix in the 2008 Technical Assessment.) The tests indicate that the
suppression systems will continue to meet FMVSS No. 208 suppression
requirements. This finding is consistent with GM's comment that its
vehicles continue to classify CRSs correctly when tested with the CRSs
newly added to Appendix A.
The agency is currently working on a response to the Alliance's
April 2007 petition; therefore, the suggestions of the petitioners that
there should be a set lead time period of 3 or 5 years for re-
certification of carry-over models will be addressed in a subsequent
rulemaking action. However, to address the recertification concerns
with respect to this Appendix A update, we have decided that a
balancing of the competing interests can be effectively realized by
maintaining the compliance date of September 1, 2009 (the beginning of
the next model year introduced approximately one year after date of
publication of this final rule), while phasing-in the requirement.\18\
The effective date and phase-in schedule apply to all vehicles, without
differentiation between new and ``carry-over'' models (these are
vehicles that were previously certified to the existing Appendix A).
Under the phase-in, 50 percent of vehicles manufactured on or after
September 1, 2009 must be certified as meeting FMVSS No. 208 when
tested with the CRSs on the revised appendix (which we have designated
``Appendix A-1''), and all vehicles manufactured on or after September
1, 2010 must be so certified as meeting FMVSS No. 208 when tested with
the Appendix A-1 child restraints. The September 1, 2009 date ensures
that suppression and LRD systems will be tested with representative
child restraints in an expeditious manner and thus maintains the
robustness of the FMVSS No. 208 test and the soundness of the child
protection systems, while the phase-in addresses the vehicle
manufacturers' certification burdens. Since there are no marked shifts
in the dimensional characteristics of CRSs, a phase-in will not have a
negative impact on child safety.\19\
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\18\ As with all phase-ins, the agency is adopting a reporting
and recordkeeping requirement to facilitate the agency's enforcement
of the standard. These reporting and recordkeeping requirements will
be set forth in 49 CFR Part 585, Subpart D.
\19\ We are submitting a request for OMB clearance of the
collection of information required under a phase-in (for compliance
purposes, manufacturers must keep records of the vehicles certified
to the current Appendix A or to the amended Appendix A, and report
that information to NHTSA so that the agency knows which CRSs to use
to test vehicles to FMVSS No. 208 suppression and LRD requirements).
We request comments on the collection of information. See the
section of this preamble entitled, ``Regulatory Analyses and
Notices.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The phase-in has a practical effect of permitting 50 percent of
carry-over vehicles to continue to certify to the existing appendix for
a period, albeit for a shorter period than the Alliance's suggested
period of 3 years or Porsche's suggested period of 5 years. (A
manufacturer may choose to have new model vehicles or carry-over
vehicles of established models, or both, comprise the 50 percent of
vehicles that can be phased-in to the requirement to certify to the
revised Appendix A.) The ability to carry over a large percentage of
its vehicles for a year works to alleviate compliance burdens on
manufacturers.
On the other hand, in response to Safe Ride News, we do not agree
that the September 1, 2009 date could be moved up. Although the CRSs
newly added to Appendix A will be more readily available than the
current seats, recertifying to the new appendix will involve more than
just procuring the new CRSs. Vehicle manufacturers need time to test
and certify their vehicles. Further, as noted above, we have not seen
indication of significant shifts in the CRS characteristics pertinent
to air bag performance, so there is not a need to expedite the
September 1, 2009 date based on potential real-world safety benefits
that could be gained.
We are denying Ferrari's suggestion that we specify in FMVSS No.
208 that if a vehicle manufacturer previously certified a vehicle model
using an older CRS that was replaced by this final rule by an
``equivalent'' CRS (these CRSs were listed in Table 2 of the NPRM and
Table 2 of this preamble), the vehicle manufacturer does not have to
retest said vehicle model using the newer CRS. We do not believe that
such a provision is necessary or appropriate. NHTSA does not require
vehicle manufacturers to undertake any of the testing specified in the
FMVSSs; a manufacturer just needs to ensure that its vehicles meet the
requirements of the applicable standard when NHTSA tests the
manufacturer's vehicles using the procedures specified in the standard.
Thus, a manufacturer has the discretion to decide what testing, if any,
is needed to certify the vehicle with the updated appendix.
VI. Early Compliance and Picking and Choosing of CRSs
The NPRM proposed to provide manufacturers the option of early
compliance with the amended list, i.e., it was proposed that
manufacturers may choose to certify their vehicles with the updated
Appendix A prior to the effective date of the provision, as long as the
manufacturer notifies the agency that it is exercising this option.
However, NHTSA proposed that manufacturers choosing the early
compliance option would not be permitted to pick and choose among the
CRSs that would be newly added by the final rule. Vehicle manufacturers
choosing the early compliance option would have to ensure that their
vehicles meet the advanced air bag requirements when NHTSA uses all of
the newly-added CRSs (along with the CRSs that were not affected by the
amendment). NHTSA proposed this limitation to maintain the integrity of
the appendix: The child restraints in each appendix are each part of a
comprehensive set based on their physical characteristics and as such,
should be maintained as a set.
Agency Response: No commenter objected to the proposal, although
the Alliance stated that lead time constraints make it very unlikely
that any manufacturer will be able to certify its MY 2009 vehicles to
the new version, since, the commenter stated, the sales of these
vehicles generally commence in the fall of 2008 or earlier. We are
ratifying the provisions discussed above without change. Manufacturers
may not pick and choose to certify with some CRSs from Appendix A and
some from Appendix A-1.
[[Page 66794]]
VII. Testing Issues
Commenters raised questions relating to how the agency will use the
CRSs in Appendix A. These questions are answered below.
a. Positioning of Adjustable Features
TRW recommends that NHTSA specify what position(s) the adjustable
features, e.g., adjustable headrests (Evenflo Generations) and
positionable ``feet'' (Graco Snugride and Evenflo Discovery Adjust
Right), should be in during testing because, the commenter stated, they
may affect their installation in a vehicle and/or how the CRS interacts
with the vehicle seat, suppression system sensors, or deploying air
bags.
Agency Response: We do not agree that minor adjustments need to be
specified in the standard. For the FMVSS No. 208 tests conducted with
CRSs, the standard's test procedures state that the installer should
follow, to the extent possible, the child restraint manufacturer's
directions regarding proper installation of the CRS. Those directions
generally provide sufficient information to conduct the compliance
test. For example, Evenflo's instructions for the Evenflo Generations
state that the headrest should be positioned immediately above the
harness slots in use. For other adjustments, the standard is silent
because the adjustment is irrelevant for the compliance test; it does
not matter how the feature is adjusted because the adjustment does not
affect the performance results.
For a few adjustments, FMVSS No. 208 specifically overrides the
manufacturer's instructions but is clear in its instruction in those
instances. For example, the agency's FMVSS No. 208 test procedure (TP
208) does not require that the CRS be at the manufacturer's recommended
angle.\20\ In its comment on the NPRM, TRW recommended rewording FMVSS
No. 208 and TP208 to require that the CRS level indicator, if present,
be in the recommended range. We disagree with this suggestion. FMVSS
No. 208 does not specifically require that the CRS level indicator be
in the recommended range because the use of positioning devices, such
as rolled up towels, do not allow repeatable installations.\21\
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\20\ FMVSS No. 208, S20.2.1.5(c) states: ``* * * secure the
child restraint by following, to the extent possible, the child
restraint manufacturer's directions regarding proper installation of
the restraint for the orientation being installed.'' The TP 208-13,
Data Sheet 17, Page 111, states: ``Do not use any positioning
devices such as towels.'' Therefore, even though the CRS
manufacturer's directions specify a recommended angle, achieving it
will not be required for compliance tests if the use of positioning
devices is necessary.
\21\ In the May 12, 2000 Advanced Air Bag Rule, NHTSA
acknowledged that some consumers do use rolled up towels or blankets
and that manufacturers may need to address this in designing their
advanced air bag systems. The agency stated: ``We note that seat-
based systems may, however, need to `read' the presence of a rear-
facing infant restraint that has been stabilized with a rolled up
towel or blanket in accordance with the restraint manufacturer's
instructions. While we will not use such objects in conducting our
compliance tests, the presence of a towel or blanket under the most
rearward portion of the child restraint is a real world scenario
which some seat-based systems may need to accommodate.'' However,
for purposes of conducting our compliance tests, as explained above
we do not use the towels or blankets.
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b. Testing the Car Bed
In its comment on the proposal to adopt the Angel Guard Angel Ride
AA2403FOF car bed into Appendix A, TRW was concerned that due to the
large size of the car bed, some vehicl