Apr-22-2017 09:38 PM
Apr-25-2017 06:56 AM
Apr-24-2017 11:36 AM
Apr-24-2017 11:17 AM
Gonzo42 wrote:
The announcements in the newspapers are that not only are the fuel taxe$ going up significantly, the vehicle registration fee$ are also going up big time.
The co$t of owning a vehicle in the People'$ Republic of California will be the highe$t in the entire nation.
Apr-24-2017 06:00 AM
Apr-23-2017 04:55 PM
wnjj wrote:SweetLou wrote:krobbe wrote:
Highway Robbery!
It looks to me like Kalifornia has co-opted the word commercial to include all pickups.
By definition, commercial means: 1. concerned with or engaged in commerce. 2. making or intended to make a profit.
Kalifornia's definition according to their code CVC 260 defines commercial vehicle as:
1. Used or maintained for the transportation of persons for hire, compensation, or profit.
2. Designed, used, or maintained primarily for the transportation of property.
Nowhere in the definition of commercial does it mention property.
SO my thinking is, if a pickup is not used for commercial purposes, there should not be any fees or tariffs over a standard passenger vehicle.
Here in Mich, it costs $8 to transfer a plate to another vehicle. Maybe that is an option for you as well.
It's right there in #2 of your discription. Designed for the transportation of property, meaning you might use it someday.
Yes, but California's definition point #2 isn't in the actual definition of commercial.
Here's one: I would consider a crew cab pickup to NOT meet that definition. It's designed primarily to haul passengers, not property.
Apr-23-2017 02:21 PM
samsontdog wrote:You are already 8 months out. Seems like an easy swap to visit CA twice a year as you commute.
I just paid the yearly fees on my 2003 F250. $280 and $84 of that was the weight fee. Then another $40 to have it smogged tested which is required every two years. I would move out of Calif if the DW would go along with it. But we spend two months along the Oregon and Wash Coast in July and Aug then nearly 6 months in Yuma
Apr-23-2017 01:24 PM
Apr-23-2017 10:36 AM
joshuajim wrote:smokeylew wrote:
I did some research online and it appears that my truck is rated commercial and the only way to get it reclassified is make the bed permanently unusable by bolting in a camper that can never be taken out.
Almost but not quite correct. In Ca you can have a "commercial" pickup reclassified to a passenger vehicle by just installing a cap, camper shell or what ever it's called where you live.
You can haul anything you like in the bed then just like you can haul anything in a SUV.
Just don't remove the cap and try to haul anything, because then you are violatingthe law.
Apr-23-2017 10:33 AM
Apr-23-2017 10:33 AM
Apr-23-2017 10:25 AM
smokeylew wrote:
I did some research online and it appears that my truck is rated commercial and the only way to get it reclassified is make the bed permanently unusable by bolting in a camper that can never be taken out.
Apr-23-2017 10:12 AM
smokeylew wrote:
Man did I just get a shock. Opened my vehicle registration renewal notice for my 2016 Ram 3500 diesel and found a $308 weight fee. Add that to the license fee and all the other gobble gook and I'm shelling out $778 clams! :M
I did some research online and it appears that my truck is rated commercial and the only way to get it reclassified is make the bed permanently unusable by bolting in a camper that can never be taken out.
Have any of you guys gotten the same shock as I have? Is this just a California thing? Don't think this is fair but after thinking about all the $200 and $300 pops I've made each year for special this or thats, the $308 is cool just to be able to hear my diesel brakes rumble as I come down the hill. I can sell myself on most anything . . . Just don't tell my wife!
Apr-23-2017 09:01 AM
Apr-23-2017 08:51 AM
SweetLou wrote:krobbe wrote:
Highway Robbery!
It looks to me like Kalifornia has co-opted the word commercial to include all pickups.
By definition, commercial means: 1. concerned with or engaged in commerce. 2. making or intended to make a profit.
Kalifornia's definition according to their code CVC 260 defines commercial vehicle as:
1. Used or maintained for the transportation of persons for hire, compensation, or profit.
2. Designed, used, or maintained primarily for the transportation of property.
Nowhere in the definition of commercial does it mention property.
SO my thinking is, if a pickup is not used for commercial purposes, there should not be any fees or tariffs over a standard passenger vehicle.
Here in Mich, it costs $8 to transfer a plate to another vehicle. Maybe that is an option for you as well.
It's right there in #2 of your discription. Designed for the transportation of property, meaning you might use it someday.
Apr-23-2017 08:51 AM