The Telegram (St. John's)

Car needs new converter to pass inspection

- Ray Magliozzi and Doug Berman

Dear Car Talk: Two years ago, my son bought a 2002 Saturn L100 in California. When he tried to re-register it and get a smog test this year, the emissions were good, but the car did not pass the smog test because the station said it had the wrong catalytic converter installed. He went to a department of motor vehicles appeals hearing, but had no luck. He's already paid the registrati­on fee, which is nonrefunda­ble, and is stumped about what to do. He's tried contacting the car seller, with no luck. What is the most logical, speediest way for him to handle this? He wants to buy a converter (with the valid ID number) online and have it installed.

— Nadine

If the converter is the only thing keeping him from passing inspection, I think buying a proper converter is his best bet, Nadine. Someone pulled a fast one on him.

You don't say whether it was an individual seller or a used-car dealer of some kind. But my guess is that a previous owner of this car failed a smog test. And rather spend the $500 for a new converter, he or she dumped the car. Cheap.

Whoever bought it turned around and “patched in” an incorrect, cheap, aftermarke­t or possibly used-car-sourced catalytic converter. Somehow, he or she finagled a smog inspection, and then sold the car to your son at a nice markup and changed his or her phone number.

The seller obviously knew that your son wouldn't discover the problem until his next smog check was due, two years later. And here we are.

So his only real recourse, if he wants to keep the car, is to get a legitimate catalytic converter. And if he still has any informtion about the seller, particular­ly if it's a business, he should report it to the California Department of Motor Vehicles. That might not help your son, but perhaps it'll help someone else down the road.

Stop the madness! You can stop driving like a knucklehea­d, and you'll help your car in the process. Learn how your driving habits can harm your car in Car Talk's pamphlet “Ten Ways You May Be Ruining Your Car Without Even Knowing It!” Send $4.75 money order in U.S. funds to Ruin, P.O. Box 536475, Orlando, Florida 32853-6475.

Got a question about cars? Write to Car Talk via email. Visit the Car Talk website at www.cartalk.com.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada