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Author Topic: Ask a state Trooper  (Read 1125 times)

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Offline Lee Borgersen

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         :police:  Ask a state Trooper:

Is the law on noisy vehicles enforced? :scratch:
 



Q: Has the law requiring vehicles operated on roadways to have sound suppression devices (mufflers) been changed? I see vehicles with straight pipes, motorcycles with straight pipes and hear many others that sound as if they have no suppression. If the law is there, why is it not enforced?

A: The law has not changed. This is what the Minnesota State Statute 169.69 states: "Every motor vehicle shall at all times be equipped with a muffler in good working order which blends the exhaust noise into the overall vehicle noise and is in constant operation to prevent excessive or unusual noise, and no person shall use a muffler cutout, bypass or similar device upon a motor vehicle on a street or highway. The exhaust system shall not emit or produce a sharp popping or crackling sound. Every motor vehicle shall at all times be equipped with such parts and equipment so arranged and kept in such state of repair as to prevent carbon monoxide gas from entering the interior of the vehicle. No person shall have for sale, sell or offer for sale or use on any motor vehicle any muffler that fails to comply with the specifications as required by the commissioner of public safety."



The law does not specifically answer how loud a motorized vehicle can be, but it does say that a vehicle must have a good working muffler that prevents "excessive or unusual noise." So any cutouts or bypasses, straight pipes or rusted-out mufflers and exhaust with holes are all illegal. Aftermarket mufflers, sometimes called "glass packs" or "cherry bombs," can be an issue as they may produce "a sharp popping or crackling sound."


Some counties and cities have local noise ordinances. Some of these cover the amount of noise, duration of noise and source sound other than ambient noise that affect residents. A noise ordinance defines which sounds are and are not acceptable at any given time so that residents can live comfortably with the sounds that they hear. Some of these are effective during certain times of the day, usually applying at night. So depending on where you live, I would check with the local authorities on their ordinances.


I know that this law is enforced, and we do our best to educate the public on traffic safety and equipment violations through education and enforcement.


Sgt. Neil Dickenson is a public information officer with the Minnesota State Patrol.
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