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chevybernie
01-23-2018, 06:31 AM
Hi.
...Because i had readed the thread of brembo caliper colors.
I think next month i´ll spend my g8 new ferrada fr4 wheels. I have till now BMW AC Schnitzer Wheels on it and that is not allowed in germany. The dealer told me, he makes all street legal, so i will buy the new ones. On EBAY USA i saw brake caliper covers with clamp mount. Has anyone these parts at his car? Hold this tight? First i must then look about the space between the wheels and brake caliper if this works. Maybe i will buy me these things.

tchr49
01-23-2018, 04:04 PM
Save your money....

JimmyJazz
01-23-2018, 06:39 PM
Save your money.... I agree! In person, they just look like covers.

BuildItYourSelf
01-23-2018, 08:36 PM
Not allowed to run said wheels in Germany you say? Hmm sounds like you should save you money on the junk covers for the cost to defend your freedom!!!

Why is a BMW wheel not allowed Germany? Because they are three pieces?

chevybernie
01-24-2018, 12:20 AM
Good morning.
I was with my car on german TÜV. That is the control organisation for vehicles. For the BMW Wheels i have opinions from the front, and back wheels. Opinions for the wheel spacers, and front, and rear tires. - Not allowed! There must be written " for Pontiac G8", not for any BMW´s. Then, all must be registered in the vehicle papers that it is street legal. I don´t know , how the dealer makes it with the ferrada wheels, so that it is all right, because if i for myself would buy me the wheels, i need opinion papers for it and in the wheels must be hit the payload. - This is normaly not so at american wheels. So i have no chance at the TÜV. There i think, americans have it much better and easier.
With the brake covers , i thought it comes better at the new wheels. But i think, then i let it save my money and buy me expensive floor mats. ( I would buy me them for longer time).

tchr49
01-24-2018, 02:59 AM
Thats a crock.....

TooManyHobbies
01-24-2018, 05:48 PM
Thats a crock.....

Coming soon to a state near you unless the electorate wises up.

STL_G8GT
01-24-2018, 06:50 PM
Coming soon to a state near you unless the electorate wises up.Please, no, just no.

Unavowed
01-24-2018, 06:57 PM
My WiKi fu is strong.

"TÜVs (German pronunciation: [ˈtʏf]; short for German: Technischer Überwachungsverein, English: Technical Inspection Association) are German businesses that provide inspection and product certification services.[1]

The TÜVs originated in Germany in the late 1800s during the Industrial Revolution, following the explosion of a steam boiler at a brewery in Mannheim in 1865. This led a group of engineers to found the first Dampfkessel Überwachungsverein (DÜV, Steam Boiler Inspection Association) and soon similar associations were created in other German cities and these came together in an association in 1873. In 1877 they issued the first standards for construction and maintenance of boilers, which became known as the "Würzburg standards". DÜVs took on inspection services for other technologies as they came into use, for example electrical safety testing and elevator inspection. In 1906 the Grand Duchy of Baden issued regulations for vehicle inspection as well as drivers, and the local DÜV was given that responsibility. By 1938 there were 37 DÜVs, and they were reorganized and renamed into 17 TÜVs. In 1951 national regulation obligated people to have their cars inspected by TÜV every two years.[2]

The individual TÜVs became multinational corporations with time, and came to provide services to industry, governments, individuals, and non-profit groups.[3]

During the 1980s and 1990s, deregulation led to competition in the German inspection and certification industry,[4] and further deregulation occurred at the end of 2007.[5]

In 2007, TÜV Nord and TÜV Sud agreed to merge, which would have created a company with 18,000 employees and sales of around 1.8 billion euros; however the companies called off the merger that same year, citing potential difficulties with integration as well as restrictions that would have been required under antitrust law.[6] In 2008 TÜV Süd and TÜV Rheinland agreed to merge which would have created the second largest testing services company in the world, behind SGS S.A.; the combined company would have had around 25,000 employees and 2.2 billion euros in income.[7] These plans were abandoned by August again due to antitrust concerns.[8]

TÜV Nord had 10,000 employees stationed the world as of 2015.[3] TÜV Nord was caught up in the 2015 Volkswagen emissions scandal; it was the company that certified VW's emissions systems.[3]

TÜVs function as notified bodies in Europe for medical device regulation.[9] In 2013, TÜV Rheinland was held liable by a French court to 1600 women whose breast implants had ruptured; the implants were made by Poly Implants Prothèses and TÜV Rheinland had certified the manufacturing process.[10][11] TÜV Rheinland had about 1.88 billion euros in revenue in 2015, with more than half generated outside Germany.[12]"

tchr49
01-25-2018, 03:25 AM
Their US branch recalls seat belts and flip keys......

Unavowed
01-25-2018, 11:36 AM
Both of which are clearly menaces to society.

BuildItYourSelf
01-25-2018, 01:06 PM
28125

donkeyGT
01-25-2018, 02:56 PM
^lol^

MongosG8
01-25-2018, 08:32 PM
28125

LMFAO!! :clap:

tchr49
01-26-2018, 03:24 AM
28125

What?? No Kleenix??
I think that says it all:):):)