If you bought a car with expired inspection for the state you live in, take it back to the lot immediately. It is illegal for them to sell a vehicle with expired inspection that is for road use. They will have to have it inspected, probably at your cost.
Generally, a ticket for no inspection sticker should not make a persons insurance go up. However, it depended on the insurance company and the details of the contract between the company and the policyholder.
When the registration has expired. The tags on your rear license plate should have the month and year of expiration, that's when you take it to get safety and emissions inspection.
No. Part 396.17 of the FMCSA requires the trailer be inspected every 12 months; they don't have an exception for moving a trailer with an expired sticker to an inspection station. You'll have to call a mobile truck repair company that has a licensed inspector (they all should have them, this comes up) to travel to your trailer and inspect it where it sits...and yeah, this is going to cost you big bucks.
It is very doubtful that the insurance company will even notice the inspection sticker being out. It should have no impact on your claim. The only issue is if the wreck was caused by lack of maintenance and if the inspection would have caught this issue. This may prove you knew about the issue and did not correct it. A normal wreck shouldn't be impacted by the sticker issue.
Your insurance should not go up, since it was not a moving traffic violation
Yes, they expire at the end of the month. Conversely, your vehicle registration is set to expire at the beginning of the month listed. Just remember one is the beginning and the other is at the end. If you look at your registration, it should say something like (Expires: 02/01/2011). Then you will know that the inspection sticker has about 4 weeks left.
You really should, regardless of the usage. If it has an FHWA annual inspection sticker, then it's subject to FMCSA regulations, the same as a vehicle requiring a CDL is, and Barney can pull you in for a Level 3, Level 2, or Level 1 inspection, and likewise put you out of service. So the PTI is a good idea.
That date should be the expiration date. 1-10 expired Jan 2010. 6-10 expires June 2010. Change it now.
expired medicines should discard in a pit on the earth
I'm not certain that "park rangers" have any authority to check inspection stickers at all (side note: some sheriffs and highway patrolmen wear uniforms that might at first glance be mistaken for that of a park ranger, particularly by someone who isn't intimately familiar with the details and was in a place where they'd expect to see a park ranger), but if this isn't a completely hypothetical question and one did in fact do what you've described, then they probably do have that authority. You can challenge it, but you'll likely lose, so f your inspection sticker was, in fact, still invalid on the second visit, then you're boned; pay the fine. If you corrected the sticker in the meantime, then by all means challenge it; you should win. If the sticker is valid despite being "the wrong color", then again, challenge it and you should have no trouble.
first you click on the person you want to give the sticker to. their IDphone should pop up. then go to their sticker page. on the top there should be a shopping cart.click it and choose the sticker you want to give. place it somewhere. that's how
You could but it might not taste as good as if it wasn't expired