Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Shaken (車検), a contraction of Jidōsha Kensa Tōrokuseido (自動車検査登録制度, "automobile inspection registration system"), is the name of the vehicle inspection program in Japan for motor vehicles over 250 cc in engine displacement.
All vehicles with an engine displacement over 250 cc are required to undergo an inspection (called "Shaken" in Japan). Vehicle weight tax and mandatory vehicle insurance are usually paid at this time. This is separate from the road tax paid yearly.
An inspection sticker from the Commonwealth of Massachusetts A Warrant of Fitness certificate issued to vehicles in New Zealand. Vehicle inspection is a procedure mandated by national or subnational governments in many countries, in which a vehicle is inspected to ensure that it conforms to regulations governing safety, emissions, or both.
Shaken may refer to: "Shaken" (song), a song by Rachel Lampa "Shaken" (LP song), a 2019 song by LP (Laura Pergolizzi) Shaken (weapon), a variety of shuriken; Shaken, a Japanese motor-vehicle inspection program; STIR/SHAKEN, a system to address caller-id spoofing; Sha-Ken , major Japanese phototypesetting company
Updated page with information on the process of taking the shaken, test requirements, workarounds and the way japanese tuners view the regulations in-order to meet the shaken. Tzu7 05:53, 3 February 2007 (UTC)
The art form is associated with Japan's underbelly, as modified vehicles cannot pass the biennial safety inspection known as shaken. Therefore dekotora operators are assumed to use grey-market certificate issuers. Since the late 1990s, dekotora have been heavily influenced by the art of Gundam. Other decorations are more akin to modern art and ...
A small two-wheel motor vehicle (小型自動二輪車, kogata jidō nirinsha), sometimes referred to as a small motorcycle, is one of the vehicle categories in the Road Traffic Act of Japan. Such vehicles ( motorcycles ) have a displacement of more than 50 cc but no more than 125 cc, or their rated output exceeds 0.6 kW but is no more than 1 kW.
Japanese officials descended on the headquarters of Toyota on Tuesday, ... “As for these safety inspection standards, this rule was created in 1951, so it’s quite outdated and hard to follow ...