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Interpretation ID: aiam0827

Mr. Roald Haugan, Director of Engineering, Airtex, 3558 Second Street North, Minneapolis, MN, 55412; Mr. Roald Haugan
Director of Engineering
Airtex
3558 Second Street North
Minneapolis
MN
55412;

Dear Mr. Haugan: This is in reply to your letter of June 28, 1972, concerning th application of Motor Vehicle Safety Standard No. 302, 'Flammability of Interior Materials'. You raise several questions in your letter which are restated below.>>>1. 'To which of the following does the law apply as of September 1, 1972:; a. New vehicles produced after that date. Standard No. 302 applies to all passenger cars, multipurpose vehicles trucks and buses manufactured on or after September 1, 1972.; b. 'New vehicles produced before that date, but *sold* to the publi after that date.'; Standard No. 302 applies only to vehicles manufactured on or afte September 1, 1972, and does not apply to vehicles manufactured before September 1, 1972, but sold to the public after that date.; c. 'Materials for interior repairs (replace headliner, etc.) made afte that date on vehicles produced *before* that date.'; d. 'Materials for interior repairs made after that date on vehicle produced after that date.'; e. 'Products designed for use in vehicles which are not origina equipment and usually not sold by auto dealers, but sold by after-market merchandisers - such items as infant seats, infant car beds, station wagon mattresses, elevating cushions, seat covers, pillows, speaker grills, curtains, gadget holders, litter bags, etc? If 'yes' to some or all of these, is it for those items *produced* by the original manufacturer or *shipped* to distributors or *sold* to the public after the Sept. 1 date?; Standard No. 302 does not apply to replacement parts or aftermarke materials irrespective of the date of their manufacture, shipment to distributors, or sale to the public.; 2. Standard No. 302 applies to passenger cars, multipurpose passenge vehicles, trucks, and buses manufactured on or after September 1, 1972. Among the vehicles you have listed, only the following are included under one of the classes to which the Standard is applicable: Jeeps, dune buggies (where constructed on a new chassis), motor coaches, motor homes, chassis mounted coaches, fire trucks, ambulances, and hearses.; 3. You ask whether testing the removable covering for seat cushions i motor coaches must include the zipper and the welting, and whether the fabric on 'non-visible surfaces' must be tested together with the fabric on the visible surfaces or not at all.; The zipper and the welting are considered part of the seat cover an would be included in the testing of the cover. The surface of the seat covering, irrespective of its visibility, must meet the requirements of the Standard. In your case, since the fabric on the visible surfaces differ from that on the non-visible surfaces, each of these fabrics must meet the requirements of the Standard.; 4. You ask whether the plastic foam used for cushioning in the mattres of a station wagon or multipurpose vehicle is subject to the Standard.; S4.2 of the Standard lists mattress covers only, and does not apply t the filling of the mattress.; 5. You ask whether the 'boot' on a pick-up camper is subject to th Standard.; We would not consider the boot as you describe it to be part of th truck, and it would not therefore be subject to the Standard.<<<; Yours truly, Richard B. Dyson, Assistant Chief Counsel