Genre: | Reality |
Country: | United States |
Language: | English |
Num Seasons: | 6 |
Num Episodes: | 49 |
Runtime: | 42 minutes |
Channel: | Discovery Channel |
Diesel Brothers is an American reality television series. The series premiered on January 4, 2016, on Discovery Channel.[1] [2] The program follows a group of friends in Utah who repair and customize pickup trucks.
Despite the name and physical resemblance to one another, the Diesel Brothers are not actually brothers. Friends David "Heavy D" Sparks and David "Diesel Dave" Kiley started a fix-it shop for all types of vehicles and brought in two other men as shop helpers.[3] They posted various videos on YouTube, one of which led to an appearance on The Tonight Show With Jay Leno. Subsequently the Discovery Channel contacted the Diesel Brothers.[4]
On November 15, 2019, the series was renewed for a sixth season which premiered on December 9, 2019.[5]
On July 16, 2020, it was announced that a three-hour TV special titled Diesel Brothers: Monster Jam Breaking World Records would premiere on August 8, 2020.[6]
In 2016, a Utah advocacy group called Utah Physicians for a Healthy Environment filed a civil lawsuit against the Diesel Brothers, alleging they engaged in "significant, repeated and ongoing violations of federal law" by modifying vehicles to create black smoke from the exhaust systems, which the group characterizes as "one of the most toxic types of pollution there is".[7] The physicians group bought a modified truck from Sparks Motors, and independent testing confirmed that without required emissions features, the truck produced 36 times the pollutants and 21 times the particulate matter compared to a stock truck.
In June 2018, after hearing testimony from an emissions inspector based in Davis County, Utah that a Diesel Brothers truck had been illegally modified, a judge issued an injunction prohibiting any similar modifications in the future.[8] Sparks stated he was modifying trucks only for off-road use under the belief it was legal and was working with the Environmental Protection Agency to ensure compliance.[8]
In March 2020, three of the Diesel Brothers (Sparks, Keaton Hoskins and Joshua Stuart) and their various companies were fined a total of $850,000[9] [10] [11] after Federal Judge Robert J. Shelby determined they had violated the Clean Air Act on hundreds of occasions and also had violated the earlier injunction. The fine was less than the maximum possible, as Judge Shelby recognized various mitigating factors.[10]
The Diesel Brothers filed an appeal in April 2020, with their attorney arguing the case fell under a split circuit with contradictory Federal rulings.[12] In 2021 the appeals court upheld the verdict and noted "flagrant misconduct" by the Diesel Brothers, but also ordered Shelby to re-calculate the fine to eliminate penalties associated with trucks or components which were sold outside Utah.[13]
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