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Interpretation ID: aiam2178

Mr. John Evans, Wenke, Burge, and Taylor, 1055 N. Main St., Suite 801, Santa Ana, CA 92701; Mr. John Evans
Wenke
Burge
and Taylor
1055 N. Main St.
Suite 801
Santa Ana
CA 92701;

Dear Mr. Evans: I am writing in response to questions you raised in a January 7, 1976 telephone conversation with Mark Schwimmer of this office concerning the determinations of Gross Vehicle Weight Rating (GVWR) and Gross Axle Weight Rating (GAWR) for a boat trailer.; >>>GVWR is defined as: the value specified by the manufacturer as the loaded weight of single vehicle. (49 CFR 571.3).<<<; One constraint on this specification is found in the Certificatio regulation, which requires that the GVWR be; >>>not less than the sum of the unloaded vehicle weight, rated carg load, and 150 pounds times the vehicle's designated seating capacity ... . (49 CFR 567.4(g)(3))<<<; 'Rated cargo load' is not defined. If a manufacturer does not provide cargo load rating to dealers or consumers, the NHTSA expects his determination of GVWR to reflect a good faith evaluation of the vehicle's load carrying capacity. In the case of a boat trailer, this evaluation should be made with the assumption that the trailer is attached to a towing vehicle and should include that portion of the trailer's load that is carried by the towing vehicle.; >>>GAWR, on the other hand, is defined as: the value specified by the vehicle manufacturer as the load varyin capacity of a single axle system, as measured at the tire-ground interfaces.<<<; The GAWR of a boat trailer's axle system could thus be less than th GVWR, because some of the trailer's load would be carried by the towing vehicle. However, the NHTSA would consider a boat trailer with a GAWR that is less than the actual load on its axle system, when loaded to its GVWR and attached to a towing vehicle, to contain a safety-related defect, which is subject to the notification and remedy requirements of the National Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act of 1966.; The NHTSA expects to issue, in the near future, Federal Motor Vehicl Safety Standard No. 120, *Tire and rim selection for vehicles other than passenger cars* (49 CFR 571.120). Until the effective date of that standard, however, we will continue to consider a vehicle with tires insufficient for its gross axle weight ratings to contain a safety-related defect.; Yours truly, Richard B. Dyson, Assistant Chief Counsel