While I appreciate that the combined drips of oil and other fluids eventually end up in the lake, beater cars are the only choice for low wage workers. A lot of those are leakers and if the only cure is a $4,000 tranny rebuild things are going to get tough.
To be fair, all those drops of oil, from each individual cars, times tens of thousands of cars a day……is what results in the roads becoming as slick as snot right after the first rainfall in a few weeks.
So I’m not sure complaining about that on a motorcycle forum of all places is necessarily the wisest option.
As for what would fail versus what would pass, I think that any active dripping or signs of oil spray on the bottom of the car suggesting that there is a seriously leak would end up with a fail. If the under car area is clean (so if someone drives a leaker, it would seem prudent to pay for the fancy super duper car wash with the bottom blaster, or get in there yourself with degreaser and a power washer beforehand), and it doesn’t drip during the cert, it should be fine I’m sure.
But really, if you are driving a vehicle that is actively dripping during a 1–2 hour certification, or is leaking so badly that it is spraying on the bottom of the car, it probably legitimately shouldn’t be on the roads anyways. And cars aren’t like they were even 20 or 30 years ago anymore, leaking is much less of an issue even on old cars. My 2011
volt doesn’t leak, same as my sons 2012. His 2008 Saturn he had before it even was every bit the definition of a beater, and it didn’t even leak anything. It’s not the 1970’s or 80’s anymore.
Rules were diff then. Different politicians then too. Not carney!
Umm, the Prime Minister has absolutely nothing to do with provincial safety standards.