Land Transport Rule
Frontal Impact 2001
Rule 32006/1
Note: This Rule should be read in conjunction with Land Transport Rule: Frontal Impact Amendment 2005 and Land Transport Rule: Frontal Impact Amendment 2008.
Contents
- 1.1 Title
- 1.2 Scope of the rule
- 1.3 Date when rule comes into force
- 1.4 Application of rule provisions
Section 2 Vehicle standards and other safety requirements
- 2.1 Application of requirements
- 2.2 General safety requirements
- 2.3 Approved vehicle standards
- 2.4 Airbags
- 2.5 Replacement components for vehicle repair
Section 3 Modification and repair
- 4.1 Responsibilities of operators
- 4.2 Responsibilities of repairers
- 4.3 Responsibilities of modifiers
- 4.4 Responsibilities of certifiers
- 4.5 Responsibilities of manufacturers and retailers
- 4.6 Functions and powers of the Director
Objective of the rule
Land Transport Rule: Frontal Impact 2001 is one of a series of rules that sets safety requirements and standards for systems and components in motor vehicles operating in New Zealand. This rule provides that the performance of a motor vehicle in relation to frontal impact must not be impaired by such factors as corrosion or structural damage; and requires specified vehicles to comply with an approved frontal impact standard. Frontal impact vehicle standards set the level of protection that must be provided for a vehicle’s driver and passengers in a frontal impact crash. The features that provide this protection work in conjunction with each other and make up a frontal impact protection system.
This rule updates and replaces Land Transport Rule: Frontal Impact 1997, which came into force on 1 January 1998.
Land Transport Rule: Frontal Impact 1997 required that for a passenger car to be registered in New Zealand it had to meet an approved frontal impact standard if manufactured on or after 1 March 1999. Vehicles manufactured before 1 March 1999 did not have to meet a frontal impact standard.
This rule requires passenger cars first certified for entry into service in New Zealand, on or after 1 April 2002, to comply with an approved frontal impact standard (unless inspected at the border before 1 February 2002). The aim of this change was to speed up the introduction of safer frontal impact protection systems by requiring compliance with frontal impact standards for all passenger cars imported into New Zealand regardless of the date on which they were manufactured. This is intended to ensure that safer vehicles would enter the New Zealand fleet. Passenger cars first registered outside New Zealand 20 years or more before the date of their first certification for entry into service in New Zealand do not have to comply with this requirement.
The wording of the provisions on airbags has also been amended. Generally, airbags must not be permanently removed or made inoperable if a vehicle was originally fitted, when manufactured, with an airbag designed to protect occupants in a frontal impact crash.
The rule also enables the Director of Land Transport Safety to specify requirements for components critical to the performance of a vehicle in a frontal impact collision, including approval by the Director of manufacturers of these components, and labelling of parts to make it clear which vehicles may be fitted with the components.
As with the 1997 rule, the general safety requirements consolidate and, in effect, roll-over relevant provisions of the Traffic Regulations 1976.
The approved vehicle standards and the Low Volume Vehicle Code are ‘incorporated by reference’ in accordance with section 165 of the Land Transport Act 1998 so that they are effectively part of the rule. A choice of international standards provides flexibility within agreed safety parameters, and enables New Zealand to align with world best practice.
Land Transport Rule: Frontal Impact 2001 states who is responsible for ensuring compliance with its requirements: operators, repairers, modifiers, certifiers, manufacturers and retailers. This links the rule to relevant provisions of the Land Transport (Offences and Penalties) Regulations 1999 (see in particular, regulation 3 in conjunction with Schedule 1).
The rule is an essential element of the safety framework governing motor vehicles in New Zealand. It links with, and provides a means of assessment for, Land Transport Rule: Vehicle Standards Compliance 1998, which sets procedures for vehicle certification for registration, in-service fitness and other purposes.
Extent of consultation
Land Transport Rule: Frontal Impact 1997 underwent a three-and-a-half-year period of extensive consultation, beginning in March 1994, with industry groups, interested government agencies and the public. The consultation undertaken by the Land Transport Safety Authority (LTSA) included the holding of formal and informal meetings with representatives, interested groups and individuals.
Formal consultation began on 31 March 1999 with the release of the yellow (public consultation) draft of this revised rule, together with the drafts of other revised rules for vehicle standards, to about 800 interested organisations and individuals. The availability of the yellow draft was publicised in 15 metropolitan and regional daily newspapers, the New Zealand Gazette, Te Maori News, the Rural Bulletin and industry publications. The draft rule was sent to overseas libraries and transport authorities and was also accessible at the LTSA’s website. The LTSA received five submissions specifically on the yellow draft of this rule. Other submissions related generally to all the revised rules for vehicle standards released at that time.
In June 2001, the Vehicle Safety Proposals Consultation Paper was mailed out to more than 900 interested organisations and individuals. There were three proposals in the paper that related to frontal impact. Eighty-six submissions were received on the proposal to require all passenger cars entering the New Zealand fleet to comply with frontal impact standards, 55 submissions were received on the proposal to require all damaged or deployed airbags to be replaced and 77 submissions were received on the proposals relating to the supply and use of replacement parts. The final consultation draft of Land Transport Rule: Frontal Impact was released in June 2001 and 59 submissions were received, of which 46 were identical.
Issues identified in submissions were taken into account in redrafting this rule before it was submitted to Cabinet and to the Minister of Transport for signature.
Part 1 Rule requirements
Section 1 Application
1.1 Title
This rule is Land Transport Rule: Frontal Impact 2001.
1.2 Scope of the rule
1.2(1) This rule applies to all motor vehicles except vehicles of Classes AB, TA, TB, TC and TD in Table A in Part 2.
1.2(2) This rule specifies frontal impact protection requirements:
- (a) with which a motor vehicle must comply so as to be operated on a road; and
- (b) that are, for the purposes of Land Transport Rule: Vehicle Standards Compliance 1998, the applicable requirements for frontal impact protection systems.
1.3 Date when rule comes into force
1.3(1) This rule revokes and replaces Land Transport Rule: Frontal Impact 1997, which came into force on 1 January 1998.
1.3(2) This rule comes into force on 1 April 2002.
1.4 Application of rule provisions
1.4(1) If there is a conflict between a provision of this rule and the corresponding provision of a document incorporated by reference in the rule, the provision of the rule applies.
1.4(2) If there is a conflict between a provision of this rule and a provision of Land Transport Rule: Vehicle Standards Compliance 1998, the provision of Land Transport Rule: Vehicle Standards Compliance 1998 applies.
Section 2 Vehicle standards and other safety requirements
2.1 Application of requirements
2.1(1) A motor vehicle must comply with the relevant requirements in Table 2.1 or Table 2.2.
2.1(2) Subclause 2.1(3) applies to motor vehicles first certified for entry into service in New Zealand before 1 April 2002, or first certified for entry into service in New Zealand on or after 1 April 2002 but inspected at the border before 1 February 2002.
2.1(3) A vehicle of Class MA manufactured on or after 1 March 1999 must comply with a version of an approved vehicle standard, unless:
- (a) the vehicle is manufactured before the phase-in date for the model, or model variant, of that vehicle in the relevant standard-setting jurisdiction or as specified in the standard; or
- (b) the model, or model variant, of that vehicle is not required by that standard itself to comply fully with that standard.
Table 2.1 Requirements for motor vehicles that are not low volume vehicles
Class | Motor vehicles first certified for entry into service in New Zealand before 1 April 2002, or first certified for entry into service in New Zealand on or after 1 April 2002 but inspected at the border before 1 February 2002 |
Motor vehicles first certified for entry into service in New Zealand on or after 1 April 2002 and inspected at the border on or after 1 February 2002 |
|
---|---|---|---|
Manufactured before 1 March 1999 |
Manufactured on or after 1 March 1999 |
||
MA | General safety requirements |
General safety requirements and approved vehicle standard1 |
General safety requirements and approved vehicle standard2, 3 |
MB, MC | General safety requirements |
General safety requirements |
General safety requirements and, if manufactured on or after 1 October 2003, an approved vehicle standard2 |
LA, LB1, LB2, LD, LE1, MD1, MD2, MD3, MD4, ME, NA, NB, NC |
General safety requirements |
General safety requirements |
General safety requirements |
Motor vehicles not in Table A |
General safety requirements |
General safety requirements |
General safety requirements |
Note:
1 Except for vehicles that do not have to comply with an approved vehicle standard because 2.1(3)(a) or (b) applies.
2 Except for vehicles first registered outside New Zealand 20 years or more before first certification for entry into service in New Zealand; see 2.1(7)(a).
3 Except for the approved vehicle standard specified in 2.3(2)(a); see 2.1(5).
Table 2.2 Requirements for low volume vehicles1
Class | Light motor vehicle last modified on or after 1 January 1992 and certified as a low volume vehicle |
---|---|
Low volume vehicle | General safety requirements and Low Volume Vehicle Code |
Note: 1 The concept of low volume vehicles and hence certification for such vehicles was not initiated until after 1991. A motor vehicle last modified before 1 January 1992 does not have to comply with the Low Volume Vehicle Code, provided the vehicle has been continuously registered in New Zealand. It must, however, comply with the general safety requirements in 2.2.
2.1(4) Subclauses 2.1(5) and 2.1(6) apply to motor vehicles first certified for entry into service in New Zealand on or after 1 April 2002 and inspected at the border on or after 1 February 2002.
2.1(5) A vehicle of Class MA in 2.1(4) must comply with a version of an approved vehicle standard in 2.3(2)(b) to (f).
2.1(6) A vehicle of Class MB or Class MC first manufactured on or after 1 October 2003 must comply with a version of an approved vehicle standard, as specified in 2.3.
2.1(7) Subclauses 2.1(5) and 2.1(6) do not apply to:
- (a) a motor vehicle first registered outside New Zealand 20 years or more before its date of first certification for entry into service in New Zealand; or
- (b) a motor vehicle that has been certified as a low volume vehicle.
2.2 General safety requirements
2.2(1) Subject to 2.4(3), 2.4(4) and 2.4(5), the performance of a motor vehicle in relation to protecting occupants in a frontal impact collision must not be reduced below a safe tolerance of its state when manufactured or modified, by any factors, including corrosion, structural damage, material degradation, inadequate repair, the fitting of additional equipment, or the removal of equipment.
2.2(2) In assessing whether the general safety requirements in 2.2(1) have been complied with, a person specified in section 4 may take into account:
- (a) the function of the additional equipment fitted to the motor vehicle after manufacture, and the measures taken to minimise the risk of injury from the equipment;
- (b) evidence that the motor vehicle is within the manufacturer’s operating limits.
2.3 Approved vehicle standards
2.3(1) A frontal impact protection system must comply, if specified in Table 2.1, with a version, as specified in 2.3(4), of one of the approved vehicle standards in 2.3(2).
2.3(2) The approved vehicle standards for frontal impact protection systems are:
- (a) Directive 96/79/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 16 December 1996 on the protection of occupants of motor vehicles in the event of a frontal impact [which, for the purpose of occupant protection in the event of a frontal impact, amends the Council Directive of 6 February 1970 on the approximation of the laws of the Member States relating to the type-approval of motor vehicles and their trailers (70/156/EEC)];
- (b) UN/ECE Regulation No. 94, Uniform provisions concerning the approval of vehicles with regard to the protection of the occupants in the event of a frontal collision (E/ECE/324-E/ECE/TRANS/505/Rev.1/Add.93);
- (c) Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard No. 208, Occupant Crash Protection in Passenger Cars, Multipurpose Passenger Vehicles, Trucks and Buses;
- (d) Australian Design Rule 69, Full Frontal Impact Occupant Protection;
- (e) Australian Design Rule 73, Offset Frontal Impact Protection;
- (f) Technical Standard for Occupant Protection in Frontal Collision (Japan).
Approved vehicle standards include amendments to standards
2.3(3) An approved vehicle standard in 2.3(2) includes all amendments to that standard, some of which may apply to classes of vehicle additional to those covered by the original standard.
Version of vehicle standards
2.3(4) A frontal impact protection system must comply with the version of an approved vehicle standard that is:
- (a) applicable in the relevant standard-setting jurisdiction to the date of manufacture of the motor vehicle or as specified in the standard; or
- (b) a more recent version of that standard if the safety performance of the vehicle is not adversely affected.
Compliance with vehicle standards
2.3(5) A frontal impact protection system complies for the purpose of this rule with an applicable approved vehicle standard or the Low Volume Vehicle Code if:
- (a) it complied with that standard or the Code when manufactured or modified; and
- (b) it is currently within safe tolerance of its state when manufactured or modified.
2.3(6) A frontal impact protection system in a low volume vehicle must comply, as specified in Table 2.2, with the requirements of the Low Volume Vehicle Code that are applicable to the date of certification or recertification of the motor vehicle as a low volume vehicle.
2.4 Airbags
2.4(1) This clause applies only to airbags designed to protect occupants in the event of a frontal impact crash.
2.4(2) Except as otherwise provided in this clause, an airbag and its operating system must not be removed from a motor vehicle or rendered inoperable.
2.4(3) An airbag may be removed temporarily for the purpose of repair (either to the airbag or to another part of the motor vehicle to which it is attached) or replacement.
2.4(4) If the retention of an airbag could pose a risk of serious injury if the airbag is deployed, the airbag and its operating system may be rendered inoperable in, or removed from, a motor vehicle:
- (a) that has been modified to accommodate the needs of a person with a disability; or
- (b) that has had extensive modifications made to its frontal impact structure, for specialist use.
2.4(5) An airbag may be rendered inoperable in, or removed from, a motor vehicle 14 years or more after the date on which the vehicle was first registered in any country, provided that the vehicle is then certified in accordance with 2.4(6) or 2.4(7) (as applicable).
2.4(6) A light motor vehicle whose airbag and airbag operating system have been removed or rendered inoperable under 2.4(4) or 2.4(5) must be certified in accordance with the Low Volume Vehicle Code.
2.4(7) A heavy motor vehicle whose airbag and airbag operating system have been removed or rendered inoperable under 2.4(4) or 2.4(5) must be certified by a specialist certifier in accordance with Land Transport Rule: Vehicle Standards Compliance 1998.
2.4(8) A switch may be installed in a motor vehicle to render an airbag temporarily inoperable, and the switch may be activated in circumstances where the deployment of an airbag could pose a risk of serious injury, provided that the switch:
- (a) was installed as original equipment by the vehicle manufacturer; or
- (b) is retrofitted and certified in accordance with the Low Volume Vehicle Code.
2.4(9) A motor vehicle must not have a sign, light or other device that indicates it is fitted with an airbag, if it is not fitted with an airbag.
2.4(10) If a device specified in 2.4(9) is not able to be readily removed, a label that indicates an airbag has been removed must be permanently attached in a prominent location where it is clearly visible to any occupant in the seating position previously protected by the airbag.
2.4(11) A motor vehicle must not have a light or other device indicating an airbag operating system is operable if it is inoperable.
2.4(12) An airbag warning-light system, if fitted by a vehicle manufacturer, must remain operational.
2.5 Replacement components for vehicle repair
A replacement component of a frontal impact protection system that is manufactured, stocked or offered for sale for fitting to a motor vehicle to be operated on a New Zealand road must not prevent a motor vehicle from complying with this rule.
Section 3 Modification and repair
3.1 Modification
A modification to a motor vehicle that affects its frontal impact performance:
- (a) must not prevent the vehicle from complying with this rule; and
- (b) must be certified as specified in Land Transport Rule: Vehicle Standards Compliance 1998.
3.2 Repair
A repair to a component or a group of components that affects a motor vehicle’s frontal impact performance must comply with Land Transport Rule: Vehicle Repair 1998 and must not prevent the vehicle from complying with this rule.
Section 4 Responsibilities
4.1 Responsibilities of operators
A person who operates a motor vehicle must ensure that the vehicle complies with this rule.
4.2 Responsibilities of repairers
A person who repairs a motor vehicle so as to affect its frontal impact performance must ensure that the repair:
- (a) does not prevent the vehicle from complying with this rule; and
- (b) complies with Land Transport Rule: Vehicle Repair 1998.
4.3 Responsibilities of modifiers
A person who modifies a motor vehicle so as to affect its frontal impact performance must:
- (a) ensure that the modification does not prevent the vehicle from complying with this rule; and
- (b) notify the operator if the vehicle must be inspected and, if necessary, certified, because there is reason to believe it is:
- (i) a light motor vehicle that has been modified to become a low volume vehicle; or
- (ii) a heavy motor vehicle that has been modified so as to adversely affect its safety performance or compliance with this rule.
4.4 Responsibilities of certifiers
A certifier must not certify a motor vehicle under Land Transport Rule: Vehicle Standards Compliance 1998 if they have reason to believe that the vehicle does not comply with this rule.
4.5 Responsibilities of manufacturers and retailers
A person may manufacture, stock or offer for sale a component intended for fitting to a motor vehicle to be operated on a New Zealand road, only if the component:
- (a) complies with this rule; and
- (b) if used to repair a vehicle, does not prevent a vehicle, its structure, systems, components or equipment from complying with this rule; and
- (c) if of a type specified in 4.6, complies with any requirements specified in accordance with 4.6(2).
4.6 Functions and powers of the Director
4.6(1) The Director may, by notice in the Gazette, specify types of replacement components of frontal impact protection systems for the purposes of this clause, if, in the opinion of the Director, this is necessary to ensure that the components comply with 2.5.
4.6(2) In a notice given under 4.6(1), the Director may specify any of the following requirements that are to apply to those types of component:
- (a) if the component is new, that the component be made by a manufacturer approved by the Director;
- (b) if the component is second-hand, that:
- (i) the salvaged component be from a motor vehicle that was registered in a jurisdiction named in the notice; and
- (ii) the component be approved for the purposes of repair of a motor vehicle by a person appointed by the Director;
- (c) that a person in 4.5 provide a label or supply information specifying the vehicle make and model to which the component may be fitted.
4.6(3) The Director may direct a person in 4.5 to recall replacement components, if, in the opinion of the Director, the components do not comply with 2.5, and direct that that person bear the costs associated with the recall.
[Note: A breach of a responsibility in this section is an offence, as provided in the Land Transport (Offences and Penalties) Regulations 1999, and is subject to a penalty as specified in those regulations.]
Part 2 Definitions
- Approved vehicle standard
- means a vehicle standard in 2.3(2).
- Certifier
- means a person appointed by the Director in accordance with Land Transport Rule: Vehicle Standards Compliance 1998.
- Certify
- in relation to a motor vehicle, means to verify that the vehicle complies with applicable requirements.
- Class
- in relation to vehicles, means a category of vehicle of one of the Groups A, L, M, N and T, as specified in Table A: Vehicle classes.
- Director
- means the Director of Land Transport Safety appointed under section 186 of the Land Transport Act 1998.
- EEC, EC
- are abbreviations for directives of the European Economic Community and, later, the European Communities.
- Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard
- is a vehicle standard of the United States of America.
- Frontal impact protection system
- means a set of associated parts, components, and systems incorporated in a motor vehicle to protect occupants in a frontal impact collision.
- Gross vehicle mass
- means either:
- (a) the maximum permitted mass of a vehicle, which includes the mass of the accessories, the crew, the passengers and load, and is, unless (b) applies, the gross vehicle mass specified (subsequent to the latest modification, if any) by the manufacturer of the vehicle; or
- (b) if a person approved for the purpose by the Director determines that the gross vehicle mass should differ from that specified by the manufacturer, taking into account evidence on the capability of the systems and components of the vehicle, or the effects of any modification, that mass determined by that person.
- Heavy motor vehicle
- means a motor vehicle that is either:
- (a) of Class MD3, MD4, ME, NB, NC, TC or TD; or
- (b) a vehicle (not of a class in Table A: Vehicle classes) with a gross vehicle mass that exceeds 3500 kg.
- Light motor vehicle
- means a motor vehicle of any class except one defined as a ‘heavy motor vehicle’.
- Low volume vehicle
- means a motor vehicle of a class in Table A: Vehicle classes, other than Class MD3, MD4, ME, NB, NC, TC or TD, that is:
- (a) manufactured, assembled or scratch-built in quantities of 200 or less at any one location in any one year, by a manufacturer whose total production of motor vehicles does not exceed 200 units over the same period, and where the construction of the vehicle directly or indirectly affects compliance of the vehicle with any of the vehicle standards prescribed by New Zealand law; or
- (b) modified uniquely, or in quantities of 200 or less at any one location in any one year, in such a way as to affect the compliance of the vehicle, its structure, systems, components, and equipment, with a legal requirement relating to safety performance applicable at the time of the modification.
- Low Volume Vehicle Code
- means the code of the Low Volume Vehicle Technical Association Incorporated.
- Manufacturer’s operating limits
- means:
- (a) in relation to a motor vehicle, the allowance provided by the vehicle manufacturer in terms of performance capability and dimensions, relative to deterioration, malfunction or damage beyond which the safe performance of the vehicle, as defined by the vehicle manufacturer, is compromised; and
- (b) in relation to a system, component or item of equipment, incorporated in or attached to a vehicle, the allowance provided by the system, component or equipment manufacturer in terms of performance capability and dimensions, relative to the deterioration, malfunction or damage, beyond which the safe performance of the system, component or item of equipment (and consequently the vehicle) is compromised.
- Modify
- in relation to a motor vehicle, means to change the vehicle from its original state by altering, substituting, adding or removing any structure, system, component or equipment; but does not include repair.
- Motor vehicle
- means a vehicle drawn or propelled by mechanical power; and includes a trailer; but does not include:
- (a) a vehicle running on rails;
- (b) an invalid carriage;
- (c) a trailer (other than a trailer designed solely for the carriage of goods) that is designed and used exclusively as part of the armament of the New Zealand Defence Force;
- (d) a trailer running on one wheel and designed exclusively as a speed measuring device or for testing the wear of vehicle tyres;
- (e) a vehicle designed for amusement purposes and used exclusively within a place of recreation, amusement, or entertainment to which the public does not have access with motor vehicles;
- (f) a pedestrian-controlled machine.
- Operate
- in relation to a vehicle, means to drive or use the vehicle on a road, or to cause or permit the vehicle to be on a road, or to be driven on a road, whether or not the person is present with the vehicle.
- Original equipment
- means equipment fitted by the motor vehicle manufacturer when the vehicle is manufactured.
- Phase-in date
- means the date specified in an approved vehicle standard from which a model, or model variant, of a vehicle must comply with that standard or part of that standard.
- Repair
- means to restore a damaged or worn motor vehicle, its structure, systems, components or equipment; and includes the replacement of damaged or worn structures, systems, components or equipment with equivalent undamaged or new structures, systems, components or equipment.
- Safe tolerance
- means the tolerance within which the safe performance of the vehicle, its structure, systems, components or equipment is not compromised, having regard to any manufacturer’s operating limits.
- Scratch-built vehicle
- means a motor vehicle that is either:
- (a) assembled from previously unrelated components and construction materials that have not been predominantly sourced from donors of a single make or model and that, in its completed form, never previously existed as a mass-produced vehicle, although the external appearance may resemble or replicate an existing vehicle; or
- (b) a modified production vehicle that contains less than the following components from a mass-produced vehicle of a single make and model:
- (i) 40% of the chassis rails and 50% of the crossmembers, or alternatively 40% of a spaceframe, or 40% of the floorpan of a unitary constructed body, whichever is appropriate; or
- (ii) for light vehicles, 40% of the bodywork (based on the surface area of body panels but not including the floorpan, internal bracing, subpanels, bulkheads or firewall).
- Technical Standard
- means a Japanese domestic vehicle standard issued by the Japanese Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport and translated into, and published in, English by the Japan Automobile Standards Internationalization Center (JASIC) in the Automobile Type Approval Handbook for Japanese Certification.
- UN/ECE
- is an abbreviation for a regulation of the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe.
- Vehicle standard
- means a technical specification with which a motor vehicle, its structure, systems, components or equipment must comply, and which is adopted by:
- (a) the New Zealand Standards Council; or
- (b) any international, national or regional organisation with functions similar to the New Zealand Standards Council.
Table A Vehicle classes
Class | Description |
---|---|
AA (Pedal cycle) | A vehicle designed to be propelled through a mechanism solely by human power. |
AB (Power-assisted pedal cycle) | A pedal cycle to which is attached one or more auxiliary propulsion motors having a combined maximum power output not exceeding 200 watts. |
LA (Moped with two wheels) | A motor vehicle (other than a power-assisted pedal cycle) that:
|
LB (Moped with three wheels) | A motor vehicle (other than a power-assisted pedal cycle) that:
|
LB 1 | A Class LB motor vehicle that has one wheel at the front and two wheels at the rear. |
LB 2 | A Class LB motor vehicle that has two wheels at the front and one wheel at the rear. |
LC (Motorcycle) | A motor vehicle that:
|
LD (Motorcycle and side-car) | A motor vehicle that:
|
Side-car | A car, box, or other receptacle attached to the side of a motor cycle and supported by a wheel. |
LE (Motor tri-cycle) | A motor vehicle that:
|
LE 1 | A Class LE motor vehicle that has one wheel at the front and two wheels at the rear. |
LE 2 | A Class LE motor vehicle that has two wheels at the front and one wheel at the rear. |
Passenger vehicle | A motor vehicle that:
|
MA (Passenger car) |
A passenger vehicle (other than a Class MB or Class MC vehicle) that has not more than nine seating positions (including the driver's seating position). |
MB (Forward control passenger vehicle) |
A passenger vehicle (other than a Class MC vehicle):
|
MC (Off-road passenger vehicle) |
A passenger vehicle, designed with special features for off-road operation, that has not more than nine seating positions (including the driver's seating position), and that:
|
Omnibus | A passenger vehicle that has more than nine seating positions (including the driver's seating position). An omnibus comprising two or more non-separable but articulated units shall be considered as a single vehicle. |
MD (Light omnibus) | An omnibus that has a gross vehicle mass not exceeding 5 tonnes. |
MD 1 | An omnibus that has a gross vehicle mass not exceeding 3.5 tonnes and not more than 12 seats. |
MD 2 | An omnibus that has a gross vehicle mass not exceeding 3.5 tonnes and more than 12 seats. |
MD 3 | An omnibus that has a gross vehicle mass exceeding 3.5 tonnes but not exceeding 4.5 tonnes. |
MD 4 | An omnibus that has a gross vehicle mass exceeding 4.5 tonnes but not exceeding 5 tonnes. |
ME (Heavy omnibus) | An omnibus that has a gross vehicle mass exceeding 5 tonnes. |
Goods vehicle | A motor vehicle that:
|
NA (Light goods vehicle) | A goods vehicle that has a gross vehicle mass not exceeding 3.5 tonnes. |
NB (Medium goods vehicle) | A goods vehicle that has a gross vehicle mass exceeding 3.5 tonnes but not exceeding 12 tonnes. |
NC (Heavy goods vehicle) | A goods vehicle that has a gross vehicle mass exceeding 12 tonnes. |
Trailer | A vehicle without motive power that is constructed for the purpose of being drawn behind a motor vehicle. |
TA (Very light trailer) | A single-axled trailer that has a gross vehicle mass not exceeding 0.75 tonnes. |
TB (Light trailer) | A trailer (other than a Class TA trailer) that has a gross vehicle mass not exceeding 3.5 tonnes. |
TC (Medium trailer) | A trailer that has a gross vehicle mass exceeding 3.5 tonnes but not exceeding 10 tonnes. |
TD (Heavy trailer) | A trailer that has a gross vehicle mass exceeding 10 tonnes. |
Land Transport Rule - Frontal Impact 2001 - Rule 32006/1
Land Transport Safety Authority of New Zealand, Te Mana Marutau Waka Whenua o Aotearoa