veedubtuner
Well-Known Member
Well of course now I HAVE to Google it....IDK when but I can tell you one thing. Do Not Google Ass Less when anyone's around!![]()
Not on my work PC though lol.

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Well of course now I HAVE to Google it....IDK when but I can tell you one thing. Do Not Google Ass Less when anyone's around!![]()

Last post from Joel was back in February. Is it time to have @DukeCanBuildit search him out?I hope woodworker is ok. He was very active here over the winter.
By 2027, you'll be getting something MUCH worse than ASS.Resurrection.
I wonder when we'll start to see new cars sold that are A.S.S. less?2027 probably wishful thinking I bet. Maybe 2028?
About the time they do away with ASS, they'll have "remote stop", auto remote start" and "refuse to start" embedded in the new model years. And unlike ASS, those "feetures" will be almost impossible to bypass. They''ll have a good reason to rationalize implementation, but they'll never tell you the real reason.Resurrection.
I wonder when we'll start to see new cars sold that are A.S.S. less?2027 probably wishful thinking I bet. Maybe 2028?
You beat me to it! And you are CORRECT! Except I do believe there aren't any good intentions involved in this decision.By 2027, you'll be getting something MUCH worse than ASS.
Just wait until the Driver Monitoring System decides that you're not quite ready to drive.
By 2027, U.S. federal law requires new vehicles to feature advanced impaired-driving prevention technology. Mandated by the 2021 Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (HALT Act), these systems will use cameras, sensors, and AI to monitor driver behavior (eyes, head movements) and detect alcohol levels, with the ability to prevent the car from starting if impairment is detected
Already implemented in some vehicles outside the US.
Prevents drunk driving, right? So not a bad thing, right?
The road to hell is paved with good intentions...


I doubt that it happens by 2027:By 2027, you'll be getting something MUCH worse than ASS.
Just wait until the Driver Monitoring System decides that you're not quite ready to drive.
By 2027, U.S. federal law requires new vehicles to feature advanced impaired-driving prevention technology. Mandated by the 2021 Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (HALT Act), these systems will use cameras, sensors, and AI to monitor driver behavior (eyes, head movements) and detect alcohol levels, with the ability to prevent the car from starting if impairment is detected
Already implemented in some vehicles outside the US.
Prevents drunk driving, right? So not a bad thing, right?
The road to hell is paved with good intentions...
Here's hoping it gets smacked down.I doubt that it happens by 2027:
The final RULING must be made by Nov 27, not necessarily implemented by then
What the Car Kill Switch Bill Actually Requires - LegalClarity
Hint: It's not kill switches.
"Where the Rulemaking Stands in 2026
The short answer: significantly behind schedule. The law gave NHTSA until November 15, 2024, to issue a final rule establishing the new safety standard.5 NHTSA missed that deadline. The agency has not issued a proposed rule, let alone a final one.
The statute does include a safety valve: NHTSA can extend the deadline by up to three additional years if the Secretary of Transportation determines the standard cannot yet meet the requirements of 49 U.S.C. 30111(a) and (b), which govern the performance and objectivity of federal motor vehicle safety standards.5 That extension pushes the outer deadline for a final rule to November 2027. Even then, automakers would need additional time after the rule takes effect to integrate the technology into production vehicles. Realistically, the earliest any driver would encounter this system in a new car is likely 2029 or later."
" On the repeal side, the No Kill Switches in Cars Act (H.R. 1137), introduced in February 2025, would eliminate the Section 24220 requirement entirely.12 Supporters argue the technology raises unacceptable privacy risks and could strand sober drivers through false positives.
The political dynamic matters because even if NHTSA eventually finalizes its rule, Congress could repeal the underlying mandate before the compliance date arrives "