RobertN said:
We do not have them in California either. I remember back in the early 70's they had some spot inspections; you'd be driving along, and they would have the road blocked pulling people over. Have not had that in a long time though.
Robert, I don't know what they do now, but back in the mid-50s when I started driving and got my license in Oklahoma, they used the spot inspection system. The highway patrol would set up a roadblock, ask to see your drivers license, have you blow the horn, turn the windshield wipers on and off, turn your lights on, and hit the dimmer switch, step on the brake to check the brake lights. You didn't even get out of the vehicle. If you failed in any way, you got a citation, but if you passed, the patrolman gave you a sticker for you to place it in the lower
right corner of your windshield, and if you came to another inspection roadblock during that calendar year, you'd be waved on through. If you and your vehicle passed, you got your sticker and it didn't cost you a penny, but you needed to keep your vehicle up, at least until you got inspected each year, because you never knew when you were going to hit one of those roadblocks and get inspected. And, of course, it wasn't uncommon for someone to go more than a year or two without ever getting inspected. The point being that you kept your vehicle up because you never knew when you might get inspected.
Now contrast that with what Texas and many other states do now. You know when your vehicle is going to be inspected, so you can get everything up to snuff, buy a month's liability insurance, get your sticker, let the insurance lapse, and if your brakes or lights fail tomorrow, you've got a year before another inspection
unless, of course, the defect is a visible one, such as a burned out light, and some officer stops you for the traffic violation.
Actually, the way the law was written in Texas, if something happens to your vehicle that would make it fail the inspection, you're supposed to both get it fixed,
and get a new inspection. As long as the sticker on the windshield has not expired, I've never known of anyone to go get a new inspection after replacing a light bulb, tires, brakes, horn, windshield wipers, etc.