[Federal Register Volume 71, Number 226 (Friday, November 24, 2006)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 67843-67845]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E6-19824]


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DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION

National Highway Traffic Safety Administration

49 CFR Part 571


Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards; Definition of 
``Motorcycle''; Denial of Petition for Rulemaking

AGENCY: National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), 
Department of Transportation.

ACTION: Denial of petition for rulemaking.

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SUMMARY: This document denies a petition for rulemaking from GG Quad 
North America requesting that NHTSA redefine the term ``motorcycle'' so 
that the vehicle it seeks to import and sell, a four-wheeled vehicle 
with a motorcycle-like body, would be classified as a motorcycle and 
thus be subject to the Federal motor vehicle safety standards (FMVSSs) 
for motorcycles. Currently, the petitioner's vehicle is classified as a 
passenger car. Since the initial FMVSSs were issued in 1967, the term 
``motorcycle'' has been defined to exclude motor vehicles designed to 
travel on four wheels in contact with the ground.
    NHTSA is denying the petition because the petitioner has not shown 
that redefining ``motorcycle'' to include the petitioner's vehicle 
would be consistent with the safety purposes of the National Traffic 
and Motor Vehicle Safety Act. Denial of the petition means that the 
petitioner's vehicle will remain classified as a passenger car. Before 
it can be imported, offered for sale or sold in the United States, it 
must meet all FMVSSs applicable to that type of motor vehicle.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For non-legal issues, you may call Ms. 
Gayle Dalrymple of the NHTSA Office of Crash Avoidance Standards, at 
202-366-5559.
    For legal issues, you may call Ms. Dorothy Nakama of the NHTSA 
Office of Chief Counsel at 202-366-2992.
    You may send mail to both of these officials at the National 
Highway Traffic Safety Administration, 400 Seventh St., SW., 
Washington, DC 20590.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

Petition for Rulemaking

    Today's document responds to a May 19, 2006 petition for rulemaking 
from GG Quad North America (GG Quad), which wishes to import and sell 
the ``Quad'' in the United States. The Quad is a motor vehicle 
manufactured in Switzerland by Gruter & Gut Motorradtechnik GmbH. The 
petitioner describes the Quad as being in every respect a motorcycle 
other than its fourth wheel. ``The Quad is equipped with a BMW-
motorcycle power plant.'' It uses ``motorcycle controls such as: foot-
operated gear shifter, handlebar-mounted clutch, separately-operated 
front and rear brake systems, handle bars, saddles for the operator and 
tandem passenger, and the open operating environment associated with 
motorcycling.'' The petitioner's Web site states that the top speed is 
115 plus miles per hour. http://www.gg-quad-northamerica.com/SpecificationsAndOptions.htm.
    The petitioner states that the Quad meets all FMVSSs for 
motorcycles. However, since the Quad has four wheels, the petitioner 
notes that it ``falls outside the current NHTSA definition of a 
motorcycle.''
    According to the petitioner's Web site, the Quad is authorized for 
on-road use in Europe, Russia, Japan, and Dubai. http://www.gg-quad-northamerica.com/FrequentlyAskedQuestions.htm.\1\ The petitioner's Web 
site further indicates that the Quad has been in production since 2004 
and that there are a total of 200 Quads in those four countries. http://www.gg-quad- northamerica.com/index.htm.
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    \1\ According to its manufacturer's Web site, the Quad is 
authorized in Germany and Switzerland. http://www.gg-technik.ch/eng/frameset.html.
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    The petitioner requests that the current definition in 49 CFR 
571.3(a) of ``motorcycle,''

a motor vehicle with motive power having a seat or saddle for the 
use of the rider and designed to travel on not more than three 
wheels in contact with the ground.

be revised to read as follows:

a motor vehicle with motive power, other than a low-speed vehicle, 
having a seat or saddle for the use of the rider and designed to 
travel on two, three or four wheels in contact with the ground 
provided that its curb weight is less than 1,000 pounds.\2\

    \2\ NHTSA defines the term ``low speed vehicle'' as follows:
    Low-speed vehicle (LSV) means a motor vehicle,
    (1) That is 4-wheeled,
    (2) Whose speed attainable in 1.6 km (1 mile) is more than 32 
kilometers per hour (20 miles per hour) and not more than 40 
kilometers per hour (25 miles per hour) on a paved level surface, 
and
    (3) Whose GVWR is less than 1,361 kilograms (3,000 pounds).
    49 CFR 571.3(a).

    In the event that its petition is denied, the petitioner asked for 
guidance as to how it ``may import and sell the Quad in the United 
States under the laws that it administers.''
    In support of its petition, the petitioner makes four principal 
arguments.
    First, the petitioner argues that the configuration of the Quad 
``makes it unreasonable, impracticable, and inappropriate for it to 
comply with the FMVSS that apply to passenger cars.''
    Second, the petitioner argues that the Quad is safer than any two-
wheeled motorcycle because it is more stable (due to its low center of 
gravity and a wide track), has better stopping ability (due to its 
four-wheel disc brakes) and has quick response to steering input.
    Third, the petitioner argues that the Quad is safer than a three-
wheeled motorcycle and offers the following reasons for that belief:
     The petitioner states that the center of gravity of most 
sidecar and three-wheeled motorcycle configurations is much higher than 
that of the Quad. The Quad's lower center of gravity provides improved 
stability and safety.
     The petitioner says that the center of gravity for a 
motorcycle with sidecar is located at a point between the axis of the 
two motorcycle wheels and the intersecting axis at 90 degrees of the 
sidecar wheel. The center of gravity point is not in line with the 
thrust line and ``causes adverse yaw when accelerating the sidecar 
vehicle.'' In contrast, according to the petitioner, the Quad lines up 
the center of gravity and thrust line by design, avoiding adverse yaw 
under acceleration and deceleration.
     The petitioner states that most three-wheeled motorcycles 
use the ``telescopic fork front suspension'' of the base two-wheeled 
motorcycle. The petitioner asserts ``[f]ront fork suspension does not 
respond well to input from bumps when loaded from the side'' and that a 
side loading condition occurs when turning and causes binding in the 
sliding tubes. The petitioner states that the Quad overcomes such side 
load limitations by ``using double, unequal length, a-arms or wishbone 
suspension with coil-over shocks in a fully four-wheel independent 
arrangement.''
     The petitioner asserts that there are three-wheeled 
motorcycles designed with controls similar to those on

[[Page 67844]]

passenger cars, such as a foot throttle, foot-operated brakes and 
clutch, steering wheel, and hand gear changer. The petitioner argues 
that its vehicle operates like a traditional motorcycle.
     Finally, the petitioner says that many sidecars and three-
wheeled motorcycles use motorcycle tires, which are ``designed for 
leaning into a turn and keeping a constant sized rubber contact patch 
on the road while maneuvering a motorcycle.'' According to the 
petitioner, since three-wheeled motorcycles and sidecars do not lean or 
bank, using ``traditional motorcycle tires'' on them limits available 
traction for three-wheeled motorcycles. The petitioner asserts: ``The 
Quad is designed to use low profile, flat tread, DOT-certified 
tires.\3\ A wider tire keeps a large footprint in contact with the 
road, maximizing traction during all conditions of operation.''
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    \3\ Unlike the practice in many countries, in the U.S., the 
Federal government does not certify or approve motor vehicles or 
motor vehicle equipment. The responsibility for certifying that 
motorcycle tires meet applicable motorcycle tire safety standards is 
on the motorcycle tire manufacturer, and motorcycle manufacturer.
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    Fourth, the petitioner argues that redefining ``motorcycle'' as it 
requests is in the public interest and offers three reasons for that 
belief.
     The Quad can help reduce traffic congestion since it can 
be operated, as a motorcycle, in high occupancy vehicle or carpool 
lanes in most jurisdictions.
     ``Americans with disabilities'' will be able to operate 
the Quad. The petitioner noted that drivers with leg disabilities are 
unable to operate a two-wheeled motorcycle because they cannot hold it 
upright at a stop. However, the Quad ``has a provision of control 
modification'' so that persons who cannot use foot controls can operate 
the Quad using hand controls. The petitioner also expressed the view 
that the Quad will ``appeal to senior citizens in retirement 
communities, or to those who no longer feel confident in operating a 
two-wheeled motorcycle but enjoy the open environment that the Quad 
offers.''
     The petitioner stated that the Quad provides environmental 
benefits, noting that the ``fuel mileage is generally 35 mpg.''

Agency Decision

    The agency has carefully considered this petition for rulemaking to 
redefine ``motorcycle'' to accommodate its product and denies it for 
the reasons set forth below.

Statutory Background

    The purpose of the Vehicle Safety Act is ``to reduce traffic 
accidents and deaths and injuries resulting from traffic accidents.'' 
49 U.S.C. Section 30101. Given that purpose, Congress determined that 
it was necessary to ``prescribe motor vehicle safety standards for 
motor vehicles and motor vehicle equipment.'' Id. Each standard is 
required to be ``practicable,'' ``meet the need for motor vehicle 
safety,'' and ``be stated in objective terms.'' 49 U.S.C. Section 
30111(a). The Act provides further that in prescribing a motor vehicle 
safety standard, the Secretary shall--

    * * *
    (3) consider whether a proposed standard is reasonable, 
practicable, and appropriate for the particular type of motor 
vehicle or motor vehicle equipment for which it is prescribed; and
    (4) consider the extent to which the standard will carry out 
section 30101 of this title.

49 U.S.C. 30111(b).

Definitions and Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards for Different 
Types of Motor Vehicles

    Pursuant to the mandate to issue FMVSSs, NHTSA has defined a 
variety of types of motor vehicles, including motorcycles and passenger 
cars, and established standards for them. NHTSA defines the term 
``motorcycle'' as: ``a motor vehicle with motive power having a seat or 
saddle for the use of the rider and designed to travel on not more than 
three wheels in contact with the ground.'' 49 CFR 571.3(b). This 
definition was established at the same time as the initial Federal 
Motor Vehicle Safety Standards in 1967,\4\ and has not been amended. 
NHTSA defines ``passenger car'' as ``a motor vehicle with motive power, 
except a low-speed vehicle, multipurpose passenger vehicle, motorcycle, 
or trailer, designed for carrying 10 persons or less.'' \5\ 49 CFR 
571.3(b). Thus, unlike the case of a motorcycle, whether a vehicle is a 
``passenger car'' does not depend on the number of wheels it is 
designed to travel on in contact with the ground.
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    \4\ 32 FR 2408, at 2409 (February 3, 1967).
    \5\ NHTSA defines the term ``low speed vehicle'' as follows:
    Low-speed vehicle (LSV) means a motor vehicle,
    (1) That is 4-wheeled,
    (2) Whose speed attainable in 1.6 km (1 mile) is more than 32 
kilometers per hour (20 miles per hour) and not more than 40 
kilometers per hour (25 miles per hour) on a paved level surface, 
and
    (3) Whose GVWR is less than 1,361 kilograms (3,000 pounds).
    49 CFR 571.3(a).
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Petitioner Has Not Shown That Redefining ``Motorcycle'' Would Be 
Consistent With the Interests of Motor Vehicle Safety

    Since the fundamental purpose of the Vehicle Safety Act is to 
promote vehicle safety, the agency seeks above all to promote that 
purpose, after due consideration of all relevant factors, in 
determining whether a particular action should be taken under the Act.
    This purpose also informs our interpretation of the Act. While the 
Act obligates the agency to consider whether a standard is appropriate 
for the types of vehicles to which it applies, the primary intended 
effect of that requirement is to require the agency to take care that 
its standards do not have the effect of eliminating existing vehicle 
types. It does not compel the agency to take actions to facilitate the 
proliferation of unusual vehicle designs, particularly those that 
present new, potentially significant safety risks.
    Thus, it is important that the agency take great care in even 
contemplating the possibility of revising its definitions of motor 
vehicle types so as to move some vehicles from the passenger car 
category, which is subject to a wide array of requirements for safety 
features and systems, to the motorcycle category, which is subject to 
significantly narrower array of safety requirements. From its earliest 
years, the agency has demonstrated concern that the combination of 
vehicle design trends and vehicle type definitional changes could have 
the effect of making some vehicles subject to less comprehensive arrays 
of safety requirements than those applicable to motor vehicle types 
like passenger cars and trucks. In the early 1970's, the agency issued 
a number of notices concerning the treatment of three-wheeled 
motorcycles and very light four-wheeled vehicles under the FMVSS.
    Given the steadily rising death toll among motorcyclists, it is 
particularly important for the agency to exercise great caution in 
taking any action that would create a new variety of vehicles with 
motorcycle-like bodies. In June 2006, NHTSA issued a report, Recent 
Trends in Fatal Motorcycle Crashes: An Update,\6\ which reported that 
since 1997, motorcycle rider fatalities have increased by 89 percent 
from 2,116 to 4,008 in 2004: ``The latest 2004 data show that 
motorcycle rider fatalities increased for the seventh year in a row 
since 1997.'' This report was subsequently updated on August 22,

[[Page 67845]]

2006, when NHTSA issued a press release \7\ announcing that motorcycle 
fatalities rose 13 percent from 4,028 in 2004 to 4,553 in 2005, meaning 
that motorcycle rider fatalities have increased for the eighth year in 
a row since 1997. The press release provided the following additional 
information about motorcycle rider fatalities:
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    \6\ DOT HS 810 606 Technical Report published by NHTSA's 
National Center for Statistics and Analysis.
    \7\ NHTSA 07-06, Tuesday August 22, 2006.
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     In 2005, the annual number of motorcycle rider fatalities 
was 10.5 percent of all motor vehicle traffic crash fatalities for that 
year, compared to 5.0 percent in 1997.
     Motorcycle rider fatalities and motorcycle registrations 
have both been on the rise since 1997. However, in most of these years, 
the rate of increase in motorcycle rider fatalities has been higher 
than the rate of increase in motorcycle registration (as reflected in 
the rate increase).
     In 2005, motorcycle rider fatalities increased for every 
age group. The largest percentage increase was in the 50 and over age 
group, followed by the 20-29 and 30-39 age groups.
    With these considerations in mind, the agency assessed the 
potential impact of allowing the Quad to meet the FMVSSs for 
motorcycles instead of those for passenger cars. The Quad is 
substantially less crashworthy than conventional four wheeled vehicles, 
given their enclosed occupant compartment, or even convertibles. For 
example, the Quad has limited structure for absorbing crash energies 
and does not have any safety belts or inflatable protective devices. 
While the Quad may have some advantages over a motorcycle (of either 
the two or three-wheeled variety), e.g., it appears to be more stable, 
it does not appear to be markedly more crashworthy than a conventional 
motorcycle.
    The net effect on vehicle safety of granting this petition would 
depend in part on the vehicle purchasing choices that Quad purchasers 
would have made in the absence of the availability of a Quad subject 
only to motorcycle FMVSSs. The petitioner suggests that as some 
motorcyclists age, they would switch from a motorcycle to a Quad 
instead of switching to a conventional vehicle like a passenger car. To 
the extent that granting this petition would have this result, there 
would be a lessening of safety. Likewise, to the extent that aging 
motorcyclists would purchase and operate Quads at higher speeds than 
they would two or three wheeled motorcycles, this too could reduce 
safety.
    Based on the foregoing, NHTSA declines to redefine its longstanding 
definition of ``motorcycle.'' As stated in the background section, 
NHTSA's statutory mandate is to ``reduce traffic accidents and deaths 
and injuries resulting from traffic accidents.'' We see no safety 
benefit in encouraging more of a vehicle type with the safety record 
outlined above. Although petitioner asserts that its particular four-
wheeled vehicle is safer alternative to two-or three-wheeled 
motorcycles, it nevertheless does not appear to meet any of the FMVSSs 
applicable to other four-wheeled vehicles, notably the passenger car 
standards. The agency recognizes that the number of Quads on the road 
is so limited that generation of meaningful crash data is not possible. 
Nevertheless, the agency has no data to allay its concerns described 
above. It does not have any data from any country where the four-
wheeled vehicles are used in combined traffic with motorcycles, 
passenger cars, and other vehicle types as to the crash experience of 
four-wheeled ``motorcycles'' compared with the other vehicle types.
    We also note that a redefinition of ``motorcycle'' to include four-
wheeled vehicles would not apply only to the petitioner's products. 
Such a redefinition would encourage many (particularly lower-end) 
vehicle manufacturers to manufacture products that do not meet 
passenger car or multipurpose passenger vehicle safety standards, but 
to manufacture four-wheeled ``motorcycles.'' Permitting such an easy 
means to evade the more stringent passenger car or multipurpose 
passenger vehicle standards would not meet the need for motor vehicle 
safety.
    Although the petitioner suggests a number of ways in which granting 
the petition might be in the public interest, the agency does not 
believe that those public interest arguments are sufficient to outweigh 
the agency's safety concerns. While agency has on at least one occasion 
adjusted its vehicle type definitions to allow a new class of vehicles 
(low speed vehicles) to come into being, it did so for vehicles that 
have very low speed capability and were expected to be operated in 
controlled environments, like gated communities, on roads with low 
posted speed limits. In addition, there were more substantial 
countervailing public interest arguments for permitting the LSV 
category than for permitting the Quad. In the final rule establishing 
the low speed vehicle category, the agency noted:

    This final rule responds to a growing public interest in using 
golf cars and other similar-sized, 4-wheeled vehicles to make short 
trips for shopping, social and recreational purposes primarily 
within retirement or other planned communities with golf courses. 
These passenger-carrying vehicles, although low-speed, offer a 
variety of advantages, including comparatively low-cost and energy-
efficient mobility. Further, many of these vehicles are electric-
powered. The use of these vehicles, instead of larger, gasoline-
powered vehicles like passenger cars, provides quieter 
transportation that does not pollute the air of the communities in 
which they are operated.

(63 FR 33194; June 17, 1998)
    NHTSA notes that persons with disabilities are not excluded from 
using motorcycles. Those who cannot use one or both of their legs 
currently ride three-wheeled motorcycles or two-wheeled motorcycles 
with a side car. The foot brake on a motorcycle can also be modified 
for hand use. For those who ``no longer feel confident in operating a 
two-wheeled motorcycle but enjoy the open environment that the Quad 
offers,'' convertible passenger cars provide a safe means of travel.
    For these reasons, especially given the consistent rise in 
motorcycle deaths since 1997, NHTSA is unwilling to take chances with 
the lives of American motorists, and therefore declines to permit a new 
permutation of a vehicle type that is already contributing to a rise in 
the highway death rate.
    Finally, the petitioner has asked that if NHTSA denies its 
petition, we provide advice on how it may import and sell the Quad in 
the United States. The denial of this petition means that before the 
Quad can be sold in the United States, the petitioner must ensure and 
certify that the Quad meets all applicable passenger car standards (See 
49 CFR Part 571).
    In accordance with 49 CFR Part 552, this completes the agency's 
review of the petition. The agency has concluded that there is no 
reasonable possibility that the amendment requested by the petitioner 
would be issued at the conclusion of a rulemaking proceeding. 
Accordingly, the petition is denied.

    Authority: 49 U.S.C. 322, 30111, 30115, 30117 and 30166; 
delegation of authority at 49 CFR 1.50.

    Issued on: November 17, 2006.
Ronald L. Medford,
Senior Associate Administrator for Vehicle Safety.
 [FR Doc. E6-19824 Filed 11-22-06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910-59-P