I would move out of PA for that if I lived there!Short answer, yes, except in Pennsylvania.
https://firstquarterfinance.com/is-it-legal-to-drive-a-jeep-without-doors/
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I would move out of PA for that if I lived there!Short answer, yes, except in Pennsylvania.
https://firstquarterfinance.com/is-it-legal-to-drive-a-jeep-without-doors/
Damn what did I start .....???Yes let's get NAKED! Those broncos of coarse! ???
Except its perfectly legal in PA since the mirrors stay on.Short answer, yes, except in Pennsylvania.
https://firstquarterfinance.com/is-it-legal-to-drive-a-jeep-without-doors/
It seems pretty common for states to have "if it came with X, it must have X" laws. The biggest discrepency seems to be how local jurisdictions interpret that as far as things designed to be removeable. A strict interpretation would mean the top would have to stay on since it came with one, but in the real world convertibles are common. I have heard of areas where they are strict that Toyota pickups cannot go doorless, but Jeeps can because they were designed to be removeable.I had added an aftermarket side mirror but the rule here is if it came with doors it has to have them. The old CJ's are except as you could order them without doors.
Depends on the state. I read in Illinois only one rear facing mirror is required, which in that case could be just the middle windshield mounted rear view mirror, without any side mirrors.But again, in the real world, I do not know of anyone in a doorless Jeep having issues as long as they still had mirrors - which are specifically required by law.
Tweet from the PA Lt. Governor, at the time this was tweeted in 2019.
Did you even read the article?...Except its perfectly legal in PA since the mirrors stay on.
What are you talking about? Dude's awesome. Edit: Oh, you're from Texas. Now I see why you said that lol Truth hurts, bud.IDK, that guy is a idiot.