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Originally Posted by Walker S-10
i am from canada and there is no law like that here very interesting law thanks for your info
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Yea, that's why I mentioned I saw yuo were from Canada so I had heard there was no such law there like that. In the US though, the engine has to be the same year or newer as the vehicle chassis, as I said. That means the swaps you and the guy in the other thread are doing are illegel here, which is why you probably would have gotten a bunch of responses saying "it's an illegel swap" in you hadn't mentioned you were from Canada. I actually find it interesting they don't have that law up there. I think the basic reason for it is, say you have a 92 car, them a 91 engine won't work because the emissions will be wrong. The motor will be non-OBD while the vehicle an OBD-I Vehicle. If it was a OBD-IIa 96 motor and you put in a OBD-I 94, the same problem. If you tried swappin in the older motor here you'd run into emissions testing issues. Now the reason you can put in a 96 OBD-IIa motor into a 92 civic? You can backdate the electronics and convert it to OBD-I using an OBD-I ECU. On a B18B1 or B18C1 for example, this would be a 94 or 95 ecu. You have to keep all the OBD-II sensors in place though, even if they are not being used due to the OBD-I conversion.