|
|
Effective Date: April 22, 2004
Mandatory Compliance Date: November 5, 2004
Disclaimer
The documents in HTML format that are provided on this Web site have
been prepared for use as a ready reference and do not have legal force
or effect. A Portable Document Format (PDF) version is provided for the
purposes of interpretation and application. The PDF version may be viewed
using version 3.0 or higher of the Adobe® Acrobat Reader, which may
be downloaded free of charge by visiting the Adobe®
Web site.
|
TABLE OF CONTENTS
TABLE OF FIGURES
|
|
Introduction
As defined by section
12 of the Motor Vehicle Safety Act, a Technical Standards Document
(TSD) is a document that reproduces an enactment of a foreign government
(e.g. a Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard issued by the U.S. National
Highway Traffic Safety Administration). According to the Act, the Motor
Vehicle Safety Regulations may alter or override some provisions
contained in a TSD or specify additional requirements; consequently, it
is advisable to read a TSD in conjunction with the Act and its counterpart
Regulation. As a guide, where modifications have been made, the corresponding
clause number is indicated in the margin of the TSD within parentheses.
TSDs are revised from time to time in order to incorporate amendments
made to the reference document, at which time a Notice of Revision is
published in the Canada Gazette, Part I. All TSDs are assigned
a revision number, with "Revision 0" designating the original version.
Identification of Changes
In order to facilitate the incorporation of a TSD, certain non-technical
changes may be made to the foreign enactment. These may include the deletion
of words, phrases, figures, or sections that do not apply under the Act
or Regulations, the conversion of imperial to metric units, the deletion
of superseded dates, and minor changes of an editorial nature. Additions
are underlined, and provisions that do not apply are stroked
through. Where an entire section has been deleted, it is replaced
by: “[CONTENT DELETED]”. Changes are also made where there
is a reporting requirement or reference in the foreign enactment that
does not apply in Canada. For example, the name and address of the U.S.
Department of Transportation are replaced by those of the Department of
Transport.
Effective Date and Mandatory Compliance Date
Compliance with the requirements of a TSD that is being introduced for
the first time is not mandatory until six months after publication in
the Canada Gazette, Part II, of the Regulations that incorporate
the TSD. In the case of a revision, compliance becomes mandatory six months
after publication of the Notice of revision in the Canada Gazette,
Part I, as long as the requirements of the previous version continue to
be met. Voluntary compliance is permitted as of the Effective Date of
the TSD.
Official Version of Technical Standards Documents
Technical Standards Documents may be consulted electronically in both
HTML and Portable Document Format (PDF) on the Department of Transports
Web site at www.tc.gc.ca/RoadSafety/mvstm_tsd/index_e.htm.
The PDF version is a replica of the TSD as published by the Department
and is to be used for the purposes of legal interpretation and application.
The HTML version is provided for information purposes only.
(Original signed by)
Director, Standards Research and Development
for the Minister of Transport,
Ottawa, Ontario
Technical Standards Document
Number 301, Revision 0
Fuel System Integrity
The text of this document is based on the U.S. Code of Federal
Regulations, Title 49, Part 571, Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard
No. 301, Fuel System Integrity, revised as of October 1, 2002, including
the Final Rule published in the Federal Register on July 29,
2003 (Vol. 68, No. 145, p. 44468) and the Final Rule published in the
Federal Register on December 1, 2003 (Vol. 68, No. 230, p.
67068).
S1. Scope
This Technical Standards Document (TSD) standard specifies
requirements for the integrity of motor vehicle fuel systems.
S2. Purpose
The purpose of this TSD standard is to reduce deaths and
injuries occurring from fires that result from fuel spillage during and
after motor vehicle crashes and resulting from ingestion of fuels during
siphoning.
|
(1)
(2) |
S3. Application
[CONTENT DELETED] For applicability, see Schedule III
and section 301
of Schedule IV to the Motor Vehicle Safety Regulations.
S4. Definition
Fuel spillage means the fall, flow, or run of fuel from the vehicle
but does not include wetness resulting from capillary action. (Écoulement
de carburant).
S5. General requirements
S5.1 Passenger cars, and multipurpose passenger
vehicles, trucks, and buses with a GVWR of 4,536 kg
(10,000 pounds) or less
Each passenger car and each multipurpose passenger vehicle, truck,
and bus with a GVWR of 4,536 kg (10,000 pounds) or less
shall meet the requirements of S6.1 through S6.4. Each of these types
of vehicles that is manufactured to use alcohol fuels shall also meet
the requirements of S6.6.
S5.2 [Reserved]
S5.3 [Reserved]
S5.4 School buses with a GVWR greater than 4,536 kg
(10,000 pounds)
Each school bus with a GVWR greater than 4,536 kg (10,000 pounds)
shall meet the requirements of S6.5. In addition, each school bus
with a GVWR greater than 4,536 kg (10,000 pounds) that
is manufactured to use alcohol fuels shall meet the requirements of S6.6.
S5.5 Fuel spillage: Barrier crash
Fuel spillage in any fixed or moving barrier crash test shall not exceed
28 g from impact until motion of the vehicle has ceased, and shall
not exceed a total of 142 g in the 5-minute period following cessation
of motion. For the subsequent 25-minute period, fuel spillage during any
1-minute interval shall not exceed 28 g.
S5.6 Fuel spillage: Rollover
Fuel spillage in any rollover test, from the onset of rotational motion,
shall not exceed a total of 142 g for the first 5 minutes of
testing at each successive 90° increment. For the remaining test period,
at each increment of 90°, fuel spillage during any 1-minute interval shall
not exceed 28 g.
S5.7 Alcohol-fuelled vehicles
Each vehicle manufactured to operate on an alcohol fuel (e.g., methanol,
ethanol) or a fuel blend containing at least 20 percent alcohol fuel
shall meet the requirements of S6.6.
Each vehicle with a GVWR of 4,536 kg or less shall be capable of
meeting the requirements of any applicable barrier crash test followed
by a static rollover, without alteration of the vehicle during the test
sequence. A particular vehicle need not meet further requirements after
having been subjected to a single barrier crash test and a static rollover
test.
S6.1 Frontal barrier crash
When the vehicle travelling longitudinally forward at any speed up to
and including 48 km/h impacts a fixed collision barrier that is perpendicular
to the line of travel of the vehicle, or at any angle up to 30° in
either direction from the perpendicular to the line of travel of the vehicle,
with 50th percentile test dummies as specified in the U.S.
Code of Federal Regulations (CFR), Title 49, Part 572 (hereinafter
referred to as 49 CFR, Part 572) of this chapter at each front
outboard designated seating position and at any other position whose protection
system is required to be tested by a dummy under the provisions of Standard
No. 208 of Title 49, Part 571 of the CFR (hereinafter referred to as
49 CFR 571.208), under the applicable conditions of S7, fuel spillage
shall not exceed the limits of S5.5.
|
(3) |
S6.2 Rear moving
barrier crash
(a) Vehicles manufactured before September 1, 2009 2006.
When the vehicle is impacted from the rear by the barrier specified in
S7.3(a) of this TSD standard moving at 48 km/h, with 50th
percentile test dummies as specified in 49 CFR, Part 572 of
this chapter at each front outboard designated seating position, under
the applicable conditions of S7, fuel spillage must not exceed the limits
of S5.5.
|
|
(b) Vehicles manufactured on or after September 1, 2009 2006.
When the vehicle is impacted from the rear by a moving deformable barrier
at 80 km/h ± 1.0 km/h with a 70 percent overlap, with 50th
percentile test dummies as specified in 49 CFR, Part 572 of
this chapter at each front outboard designated seating position, under
the applicable conditions of S7, fuel spillage must not exceed the limits
of S5.5.
|
(3) |
S6.3 Side moving
barrier crash |
|
(a) Vehicles manufactured before September 1, 2009 2004.
When the vehicle is impacted laterally on either side by a barrier moving
at 32 km/h with 50th percentile test dummies as specified in
49 CFR, Part 572 of this chapter at positions
required for testing to standard No. 208 (49 CFR 571.208), under the applicable
conditions of S7, fuel spillage must not exceed the limits of S5.5.
|
|
(b) Vehicles manufactured on or after September 1, 2009 2004.
When the vehicle is impacted laterally on either side by a moving deformable
barrier at 53 km/h ± 1.0 km/h with 49 CFR, Part 572, subpart F
test dummies at positions required for testing by S3(b) of Standard No.
214 of Title 49, Part 572 of the CFR (hereinafter referred to as 49
CFR 571.214), under the applicable conditions of S7 of this TSD
standard, fuel spillage shall not exceed the limits of S5.5 of
this TSD standard.
|
|
S6.4 Static rollover
When the vehicle is rotated on its longitudinal axis to each successive
increment of 90°, following an impact crash of S6.1, S6.2, or S6.3, fuel
spillage shall not exceed the limits of S5.6.
S6.5 Moving contoured barrier crash
When the moving contoured barrier assembly traveling longitudinally
forward at any speed up to and including 48 km/h impacts the test
vehicle (school bus with a GVWR exceeding 4,536 kg) at any point
and angle, under the applicable conditions of S7.1 and S7.5, fuel spillage
shall not exceed the limits of S5.5.
S6.6 Anti-siphoning test for alcohol-fuelled
vehicles
Each vehicle shall have means that prevents any hose made of vinyl plastic
or rubber, with a length of not less than 1,200 millimeters (mm)
and an outside diameter of not less than 5.2 mm, from contacting
the level surface of the liquid fuel in the vehicle´s fuel tank or
fuel system, when the hose is inserted into the filler neck attached to
the fuel tank with the fuel tank filled to any level from 90 to 95 percent
of capacity.
S7. Test conditions
The requirements of S5.1 through S5.6 and S6.1 through S6.5 shall be
met under the following conditions. Where a range is specified, the vehicle
must be capable of meeting the requirements at all points within the range.
S7.1 General test conditions
The following conditions apply to all tests.
S7.1.1 The fuel tank is filled to any level from 90 to 95 percent
of capacity with Stoddard solvent, having the physical and chemical properties
of type 1 solvent as specified in Table I of American
Society for Testing and Materials (ASTM) Standard D 484‑71,
Standard Specifications for Hydrocarbon Dry Cleaning Solvents.
S7.1.2 The fuel system other than the fuel tank is filled with
Stoddard solvent to its normal operating level.
S7.1.3 In meeting the requirements of S6.1 through S6.3, if the
vehicle has an electrically driven fuel pump that normally runs when the
vehicle´s electrical system is activated, it is operating at the
time of the barrier crash.
S7.1.4 The parking brake is disengaged and the transmission is
in neutral, except that in meeting the requirements of S6.5 the parking
brake is set.
S7.1.5 Tires are inflated to manufacturer´s specifications.
S7.1.6 The vehicle, including test devices and instrumentation,
is loaded as follows:
(a) Except as specified in S7.1.1, a passenger car is loaded to its unloaded
vehicle mass weight plus its rated cargo and luggage capacity
mass weight, secured in the luggage area, plus the necessary
test dummies as specified in S6, restrained only by means that are installed
in the vehicle for protection at its seating position.
(b) Except as specified in S7.1.1, a multipurpose passenger vehicle,
truck, or bus with a GVWR of 4,536 kg or less is loaded to its unloaded
vehicle mass weight, plus the necessary test dummies, as
specified in S6, plus 136 kg or its rated cargo and luggage capacity
mass weight, whichever is less, secured in the load carrying
area and distributed as nearly as possible in proportion to its GAWR.
For the purpose of this TSD standard, unloaded vehicle mass
weight does not include the mass weight of work-performing
accessories. Each dummy is restrained only by means that are installed
in the vehicle for protection at its seating position.
|
(4) |
(c) Except as specified in S7.1.1, a school bus with a GVWR greater than
4,536 kg is loaded to its unloaded vehicle mass weight,
plus 55 54kg of unsecured mass at each designated seating
position.
S7.2 Side moving barrier test conditions |
|
(a) Vehicles manufactured before September 1, 2009 2004.
The side moving barrier crash test conditions are those specified in S8.2
of Standard No. 208 (49 CFR 571.208).
|
|
(b) Vehicles manufactured on or after September 1, 2009 2004.
The side moving deformable barrier crash test conditions are those specified
in S6 and S7 of Standard No. 214 (49 CFR 571.214).
S7.3 Rear moving barrier test conditions |
|
(a) Vehicles manufactured before September 1, 2009 2006.
The rear moving barrier test conditions are those specified in S8.2 of
Standard No. 208 (49 CFR 571.208), except for the positioning of the barrier
and the vehicle. The barrier and the test vehicle are positioned so that
at impact:
(1) The vehicle is at rest in its normal attitude;
(2) The barrier is travelling at 48 km/h with its face perpendicular
to the longitudinal centerline of the vehicle; and
(3) A vertical plane through the geometric center of the barrier impact
surface and perpendicular to that surface coincides with the longitudinal
centerline of the vehicle.
|
|
(b) Vehicles manufactured on or after September 1, 2009 2006.
The rear moving deformable barrier is the same as that shown in Figure 2
of Standard No. 214 (49 CFR 571.214) and specified in 49 CFR,
Part 587, except as otherwise specified in paragraph S7.3(b). The
barrier and test vehicle are positioned so that at impact:
(1) The test vehicle is stationary;
(2) The deformable face of the barrier is mounted on the barrier 50 mm
(2 inches) lower than the height from the ground specified in Figure 2
of Standard No. 214 (49 CFR 571.214) (All dimensions from the
ground in Figure 2, Front View and Side View, should be reduced
by 50 mm [2 inches].);
(3) The barrier is travelling at 80 km/h ± 1.0 km/h; and
(4) The barrier impacts the test vehicle with the longitudinal centerline
of the vehicle parallel to the line of travel and perpendicular to the
barrier face within a tolerance of ± 5 degrees. The test vehicle
and barrier face are aligned so that the barrier strikes the rear of the
vehicle with 70 percent overlap toward either side of the vehicle. So
aligned, the barrier face fully engages one-half of the rear of the vehicle
and partially engages the other half. At impact, the vehicle’s longitudinal
centerline is located inboard of either of the side edges of the barrier
by a distance equal to 20 percent of the vehicle’s width ±
50 mm (see Figure 3). The vehicle’s width is the maximum
dimension measured across the widest part of the vehicle, including bumpers
and molding, but excluding such components as exterior mirrors, flexible
mud flaps, marker lamps, and dual rear-wheel configurations.
|
|
S7.4 Static rollover
test conditions
The vehicle is rotated about its longitudinal axis, with the axis kept
horizontal, to each successive increment of 90°, 180°, and 270° at a uniform
rate, with 90° of rotation taking place in any time interval from 1 to
3 minutes. After reaching each 90° increment, the vehicle is held
in that position for 5 minutes.
S7.5 Moving contoured barrier test conditions
The following conditions apply to the moving contoured barrier crash
test.
S7.5.1 The moving contoured barrier, which is mounted on
a carriage as specified in Figure 1, is of rigid construction, symmetrical
about a vertical longitudinal plane. The contoured impact surface, which
is 629 mm high and 1,981 mm wide, conforms to the dimensions shown in
Figure 2 and is attached to the carriage as shown in that figure. The
ground clearance to the lower edge of the impact surface is 133 mm ±
13 mm. The wheelbase is 3,048 mm ± 50 mm.
S7.5.2 The moving contoured barrier, including the impact surface,
supporting structure, and carriage, has a mass of 1,814 kg ± 23 kg
with the mass distributed so that 408 kg ± 11 kg is at
each rear wheel and 499 kg ± 11 kg is at each front wheel.
The center of gravity is located 1,372 mm ± 38 mm rearward
of the front wheel axis, in the vertical longitudinal plane of symmetry,
401 mm ± 13 mm above the ground.
S7.5.3 The moving contoured barrier has a solid nonsteerable
front axle and fixed rear axle attached directly to the frame rails with
no spring or other type of suspension system on any wheel. (The moving
barrier assembly is equipped with a braking device capable of stopping
its motion.)
S7.5.4 The concrete surface upon which the vehicle is tested is
level, rigid, and of uniform construction, with a skid number of 75
when measured in accordance with American Society of Testing and Materials
Method E: 274‑65T at 64 km/h, omitting water delivery
as specified in paragraph 7.1 of that method.
S7.5.5 The barrier assembly is released from the guidance mechanism
immediately prior to impact with the vehicle.
S7.6 The moving barrier assemblies specified in S7.2, S7.3, and
S7.5 are equipped with P205/75R15 pneumatic tires inflated to 200 kPa
±21 kPa.
S8. [CONTENT DELETED]
|
Figure 1 — Common Carriage for Moving Barriers
Figure 2 — Common Carriage with Contoured Impact Surface
Attached
Figure 3 — Moving Deformable Barrier Rear Impact, 70%
Overlap
|