Originally posted by cheapracer
Don't understand why, go on the angle that you have the same right to make (and sell) a car that Toyota etc. does.
In that case then, it's not an issue. Toyota et al comply with all of Transport Canada's CMVSS requirements including crash-worthiness, brake testing (held up Indian Motorcycle for over a year), etc etc. To be fair I've not undertaken a thorough study of the regulations to see what all is entailed. I do know that Brahmma or whatever their name is out of the US, who was at one time tied into bringing the Ultima kit cars into the States, has been trying to get an Atom licensed on this side of the border for some time. To my knowledge, that car is still only allowed in Canada as a track-only or show-only vehicle. If you show up at the border driving your Atom, and you aren't a Canadian citizen, there's no problem visiting the country with your own car. If you sold while you were here and flew home, the buyer would not be able to get it registered.
I know of one Ultima GTR floating around at the other end of the country and there are, as noted, a handful of local kit-car outfits building 'glass 30's hotrods but nothing like what you're doing. Short of moving into the position of full-on auto manufacturer and complying with all the standards, there's no means to do this beyond the frame and a handful of parts.
Motorcycles on the other hand...talk about a free-for-all. When I still had my shop up and running, anyone and everyone could build and sell a motorcycle be it a kit, a room full of parts sourced from catalogues, full-on fabricatin of most or all of the parts or anywhere in between. The vast majority were either kits sourced outside the country or catalogue collections - not too many people took on the task of fabricating their own frame (although at one time I was in talks to buy a frame manufacturer). Things went along smoothly until the inevitable stories started coming out. Pictures of frames with the entire front neck broken off with the front end attached to the motorcycle only via the clutch and throttle cables courtesy of a low-speed front impact that didn't even knock the rider down. Front and rear wheels seizing up while riding, with a root cause failure being no grease in the tapered bearings. There was/is a frame/complete bike manufacturer locally that was using hydraulic tubing instead of DOM or seamless because "it's easier to run it through the bender"...no shit. This same outfit built and sold frames without a licensed welder on site and built bikes without a licensed motorcycle mechanic. It was only a matter of time until someone stepped in, and it turned out to be the insurance companies. Today, if you want to have your "home-built" motorcycle registered, it needs to be inspected by the insurance association's representative which checks your reciepts against the numbers on the engine, trans and frame (if it has one), and that you've done the work and not a commerical shop. That's right. To get around commerical outfits like the one above, the twist is any accountant can braze up some old coat-racks and curtain rods and build themselves a motorcycle, but a professional mechanic (or anyone else) who works in a commerical operation can't.
Anyway, if you can't comply with CMVSS, you need to sell me the frame and body structure such as it is, and I need to course most of the rest within Canada. Classic.