citytravelfotos
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- Sep 8, 2012
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My 2000 Ford E-150 Conversion van (bought in 2013) can't pass smog because of a broken evap system, I paid $260 to the dealer for an inspection and they told me about the vent valve and the purge valve needing replacement. The dealer was going to charge me $720 but I felt it was too high and I declined. This was back in September of last year, when the registration was due (I paid the registration but they don't give you the sticker until you pass smog.) I was going to a trip around the country and I used a different method to go around, leaving the Van in the apartment complex as I went on a one and a half month trip. When I came back, I was trying to find a mechanic but I have a problem trusting anyone. So I put it off, and finally until now the apartment manager is demanding me to get the sticker or take the car off the premises. I found one independent mechanic but the amount of fixes that would need to be done on my van is unknown. It could only be the valves, which I would be lucky, but it could be more, possibly costing me a whole lot more. I've checked car storage areas around and they seem to want the car to be registered (and probably wouldn't recognize my van as registered), and if I leave it on a street the police might ticket me (especially with those license plate scanners that scans every license plate a police car comes across.) So either I fix it or they would likely fine me, and within another two months (six months after the registration), they could tow it and take it away for good. Due to complications with smog, this could be the last time I ever buy an old van, especially if I'm living in California.