While my comment is ambiguous in stating "complex emission equipment", it is clear that I am not, for example, talking about O2 sensors or catalytic converters as these are nether complex nor difficult to fix
Ok, I have to start with: What the actual #$@%, have you ever worked on a car before? O2 sensors and catalytic converters can, not be repaired under anything resembling normal circumstances. You might be able to clean an O2 sensor if it's fouled and maybe, maybe, just maybe you could do the same for a catalytic converter. Aside from that though, they are actually fabricated through quite sophisticated means, repairing them is difficult enough that it is beyond the ability of basically any mechanic (with the possible exception of replacing or splicing the pigtail on the O2 sensor if it's damaged).
To continue though, maybe you mean replacing them instead of repairing them, in which case I have to say: What the actual #$@%, have you ever worked on a car before? I will grant that it is not the absolute hardest job on a car, but I can think of hundreds of jobs that are easier. I personally have removed an automatic transmission with more ease the the catalytic converters I've had to remove. They're in an inconvenient spot, but also, at the point you need to replace them, they are pretty universally a corroded mess. Actually removing the bolts holding the flanges in place with any sort of wrench is often out of the question. Resorting to grinding them off or drilling them out is often required.
Also, how is it "obvious" that you did not mean those technologies? While you might argue O2 sensors since they provide other benefits aside from just emissions, catalytic converters are there purely for emissions (I mentioned benefits like preventing corrosion in the rest of the exhaust system, but that's still only a side-effect of the emissions). Arguing that you did not mean catalytic converters is frankly bizarre.
What I am talking about are various marginal improvement technologies that introduce unnecessary complexity and reduce reliability. Iconic example would be dynamic cylinder deactivation - complex, always problematic system that results in marginal fuel savings in very specific circumstances.
So the iconic example of what you're talking about is a technology not directly legislated by federal or state governments that is present in a small minority of cars (more often in pickup trucks) and that can be disabled in some vehicles. Also, its primary function is not emissions, but improving fuel economy rather than controlling emissions, though it will reduce emissions as a secondary effect. Also the potential engine problems it causes happen pretty much only as a result of those "very specific circumstances" you mention, so if those circumstances are rare, then the problems don't really occur. In any case at a rough calculation, it saves about 1000 gallons of gasoline over the typical lifetime of a typical vehicle with that system. So that's around $3000 at today's prices, but who knows really over more than a decade of inflation and fuel price fluctuations. Of course, this is not about money, but emissions, so that's about 8.8 tons of CO2 saved. So the question once again becomes whether there's a reduction in the lifetime of the vehicle big enough that the fractional difference between the vehicle's potential life multiplied by the total amount of emissions from manufacturing and scrapping is greater than nearly 9 tons. Let's say it reduces the car's lifespan by 10%, that would mean that scrapping and manufacturing would need to produce something like 90 tons of emissions for your argument to work. Your claim that this single feature would "reduc[e] vehicle useful life from 250K to 150K" seems a bit hyperbolic. If that were the case though, adjusting my calculations, it would be about a 1200 gallon difference between the two vehicles over 250K, or about (with a replacement of the vehicle with an equivalent one 150K) which equates to 10.87 tons of CO2. So, that would mean that the emissions from a build/replace would need to be 26.7 tons. That still seems pretty unlikely. So, while you do provide a better specific example here of a technology (even if not actually an emissions technology per se) that might reduce the lifespan of the vehicle, it's still doubtful that excluding it would reduce emissions total emissions inclusive of scrapping and construction.
This is extremely uncharitable way to interpret what I said.
It's not uncharitable. It's a completely fair synopsis of what you said. The example you provided was quite clear.
You should have asked much earlier what exactly do I mean instead of assuming. Notably so, when I responded that you are not arguing in good faith.
Umm, sorry? What?! I should have specifically asked you to clarify? You specifically wrote:
In context of my argument we don't have these additional considerations as it is direct comparison. My argument is very simple - if it costs too much to repair then people will scrap the car earlier than they otherwise would and this in turn results in higher lifetime emissions. Therefore, when optimizing for tailpipe emissions we need to also take into account effects of added complexity on repairability.
To demonstrate by example. If Car A and Car B both have the same bathtub curve [wikipedia.org], but Car B is twice as expensive to repair, then Car B will get scrapped earlier than Car A. Therefore, everything else being equal, Car A will have lower lifetime emissions.
Which is it? Is your argument very simple, or should I have asked for clarification? In this thread, there are 5 replies by me and 5 by you since then and I made my understanding of what you wrote very, very clear in the very next post after the above. If I was actually somehow misunderstanding you, it stretches credulity that you would have continued the thread this far without clarifying yourself or at least indicating that there was something to clarify. Saying, at this stage, that you were initially unclear and continued to be unclear throughout a long conversation and that it was somehow my responsibility to ask you to be clear stretches credulity to the breaking point.
As for your claim that I was not arguing in good faith, that was not even in this thread, it was in a sub-thread that you branched from this one. Also, you claimed that I was not arguing in good faith in the context of claiming that I was misinterpreting the concept of a bathtub curve. That claim in no way related to, or creates any obligation to ask you to clarify the original argument you made in this thread. The bathtub curve is irrelevant to your original lack of clarity on what you now claim you actually meant.
Disagree. Start-stop, dynamic cylinder deactivation, urethra injection, etc. have one thing in common - they are emission control technologies and they are not even dual-purpose technology like, for example, direct injection.
As I have already pointed out, two of those are not even actually emission control technologies. They are fuel efficiency technologies. Some degree of emissions reductions is simply a beneficial side effect. You can tell because car companies put them in specifically to meet fuel-efficiency requirements, not specifically emissions requirements. Consider that since start-stop vehicles meet emissions requirements when driving, there's basically no chance that they would not meet them at idle even if they didn't stop the engine when idle. Ditto for dynamic cylinder deactivation. Such engines meet emissions requirements with all cylinders running, which makes it very unlikely that they would not meet emissions requirements otherwise. Car manufacturers don't need those technologies to meet emissions requirements, but they may need them to meet fuel efficiency requirements. Even if you want to argue that they really are primarily emissions control technologies (though I don't see how you can) they are clearly dual purpose technologies if they handle both fuel consumption and emissions.
As for "urethra (sic) injection" (ouch!) that is indeed primarily an emissions reduction technology. However, can also potentially improve combustion leading to increased fuel economy and serving yet again as a dual use technology. It can also potentially reduce engine wear. It's also present in what, 3% or so of passenger vehicles? I mean, it does wrap around to the original post you replied to about diesels and emissions, but you specifically referred to "...cars that are new right now..." in your first post on this thread. Overall, diesel technology does not seem that relevant. Still, to continue on urea injection, it does not appear, overall, to actually limit the lifetime of the vehicle in any significant way, which it would have to do in order to be relevant to your argument.