Mike Cohee and I qualify for Maryland Historic plates and don't have to fool with it thank God. In Maryland if the vehicle is over 20 years old and the company is out of business and the model isn't produced anymore, you qualify. The 25 year applies if the company is still in business (like Ford). I run into people in Maryland all the time who say "Hey! That's not old enough!" because they don't research the law. So...if you're in Maryland, read-n-heed. :) Rich --- In dmcnews@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx, <krasniy@xxxx> wrote: > That sounds annoying! I am happy that Florida currently does not have > inspections....or none that I am aware of anyways :) > > -----Original Message----- > From: David Teitelbaum [mailto:jtrealty@xxxx] > Sent: Thursday, September 11, 2003 1:33 PM > To: dmcnews@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > Subject: [DML] State Inspection > > > > I just had my car inspected today by a State of New Jersey inspection > station. They are being operated by a private company under contract by > the State. New Jersey is 1 of only 2 states that has a "hybrid" system > ie: you can go to a "state" inspection station, or a PIF (private > inspection facility) aka a certified gas station. The inspectors argued > over who was going to get the chance to "do" the car. They couldn't find > the horn, gas tank, catalytic converter etc. They won't let you near the > car, sending you to a little shelter at the far end while they get to > play with your car. I stayed close so I could watch the antics. ..........