WILKEY, Circuit Judge:
Petitioner National Tire Dealers and Retreaders Association, Inc. (NTDRA) seeks review of Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard No. 117,1 issued on 23 March 1972 by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, a division of the Department of Transportation. Standard No. 117 was promulgated under the authority granted to respondent, the Secretary of Transportation, by section 103 of the National Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act of 1966 (the Act).2 Section 103 empowers the Secretary to “establish by order ap[33]*33propriate Federal motor vehicle safety standards.”
Petitioner focuses its challenge on paragraph S6.3.2 of Standard No. 117, which requires that all pneumatic passenger tires retreaded on or after 1 February 1974 have the following information permanently molded into or on one sidewall of the tire: size; maximum inflation pressure and load; actual number of plies or ply rating; the words “tubeless” or “tube-type,” as applicable ; and the words “bias/belted” or “radial,” as applicable.3 The administrative record does not adequately demonstrate that these requirements are practicable, nor does it establish any more than a remote relation between the requirements and motor vehicle safety. The Act mandates that motor vehicle safety standards promulgated thereunder be “practicable” and “meet the need for motor vehicle safety.” 4 Therefore, we vacate that portion of the Order establishing Motor Vehicle Safety Standard No. 117 which relates to permanent labeling of tire size, maximum inflation pressure, ply rating, tubeless or tube-type, and bias/belted or radial construction. However, since section 201 of the Act commands that the Secretary promulgate permanent labeling standards with respect to actual number of plies and maximum permissible load,5 [34]*34the portion of Standard No. 117 relating to those characteristics must remain in effect.6
I. STANDARD OF JUDICIAL REVIEW
Section 103(b) of the Act provides that “[t]he Administrative Procedure Act shall apply to all orders establishing, amending, or revoking a Federal motor vehicle safety standard . . . . ” 7 In Automotive Parts & Accessories Association, Inc. v. Boyd 8 we held that this provision sanctions employment by the Secretary of the informal rule-making procedures set out in section 4 of the APA.9 Standard No. 117 was the product of such informal rule-making10 rather than formal adjudicatory procedures under sections 7 and 8 of the APA.11 Petitioner has not challenged the procedures employed by respondent Secretary.
Judicial review of orders establishing motor vehicle safety standards is authorized by section 105 of the Act.12 [35]*35In Boyd we defined the scope of review of standards promulgated through informal rule-making procedures, such as those employed in the instant case:
When the issue on appeal is whether a rule made in informal proceedings meets the criteria of Section 10, the court must necessarily go about the application of that standard in a manner unlike its review of findings of fact and conclusions of law compiled in a formal proceeding.
This exercise need be no less searching and strict in its weighing of whether the agency has performed in accordance with the Congressional purposes, but, because it is addressed to different materials, it inevitably varies from the adjudicatory model. The paramount objective is to see whether the agency, given an essentially legislative task to perform, has carried it out in a manner calculated to negate the dangers of arbitrariness and irrationality in the formulation of rules for general application in the future.13
This is the standard of review which we apply in scrutinizing Motor Vehicle Safety Standard No. 117.
II. RELATION OF THE CHALLENGED STANDARD TO SAFETY
The stated purpose of the National Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act of 1966 is “to reduce traffic accidents and deaths and injuries to persons resulting from traffic accidents.” 14 Thus, “each Federal motor vehicle safety standard . . . shall meet the need for.motor vehicle safety.”15 The Act defines “motor vehicle safety” as “the performance of motor vehicles or motor vehicle equipment in such a manner that the public is protected against unreasonable risk of accidents occurring as a result of the design, construction or performance of motor vehicles and is also protected against unreasonable risk of death or injury to persons in the event accidents do occur . . . . ”16
The general requirement that retreaded tires be labeled with the items of in[36]*36formation specified in paragraph S6.3.2 of Standard No. 117 clearly bears a substantial relation to the Act’s purpose of achieving motor vehicle safety. As the preamble to the publication of Standard No. 117 states:
Size, maximum load, and maximum permissible inflation pressure are required because each is necessary for proper selection and use of passenger car tires.
******
The words “bias/belted” and “radial” are required, where appropriate, in order to identify tires of different types of construction. There is presently a large body of opinion . that mixing tires of differing construction types on the same vehicle or same axle of a vehicle is not in the best interests of safety.
* * * * * *
The words “tubeless” or “tube type” are also required to be labeled onto completed retreaded tires. Almost all of the comments considered this information to be safety related.17
It is indisputable that labeling of tires is necessary to prevent mismatching, overloading, or overinflation, all significant safety hazards.
But the issue here is what relation permanent labeling has to avoidance of those hazards. Petitioner recognizes the importance of labeling retreaded tires with the information required by Standard No. 117, and states:
The retreading industry can and will record such information as is available on a label affixed to the retreaded tire so that the information will be known to the consumer at the time of purchase.18
However, petitioner asserts that the Secretary “has not found that the information required by S6.3.2 can meet the need for motor vehicle safety only if it is permanently labeled into the retreaded tire.”19
A permanent labeling requirement is clearly unnecessary to protect original purchasers of retreaded tires. A non-permanent, affixed label can supply such purchasers with all the information specified in Standard No. 117 and thus permit them to select tires of proper size and construction.
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WILKEY, Circuit Judge:
Petitioner National Tire Dealers and Retreaders Association, Inc. (NTDRA) seeks review of Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard No. 117,1 issued on 23 March 1972 by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, a division of the Department of Transportation. Standard No. 117 was promulgated under the authority granted to respondent, the Secretary of Transportation, by section 103 of the National Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act of 1966 (the Act).2 Section 103 empowers the Secretary to “establish by order ap[33]*33propriate Federal motor vehicle safety standards.”
Petitioner focuses its challenge on paragraph S6.3.2 of Standard No. 117, which requires that all pneumatic passenger tires retreaded on or after 1 February 1974 have the following information permanently molded into or on one sidewall of the tire: size; maximum inflation pressure and load; actual number of plies or ply rating; the words “tubeless” or “tube-type,” as applicable ; and the words “bias/belted” or “radial,” as applicable.3 The administrative record does not adequately demonstrate that these requirements are practicable, nor does it establish any more than a remote relation between the requirements and motor vehicle safety. The Act mandates that motor vehicle safety standards promulgated thereunder be “practicable” and “meet the need for motor vehicle safety.” 4 Therefore, we vacate that portion of the Order establishing Motor Vehicle Safety Standard No. 117 which relates to permanent labeling of tire size, maximum inflation pressure, ply rating, tubeless or tube-type, and bias/belted or radial construction. However, since section 201 of the Act commands that the Secretary promulgate permanent labeling standards with respect to actual number of plies and maximum permissible load,5 [34]*34the portion of Standard No. 117 relating to those characteristics must remain in effect.6
I. STANDARD OF JUDICIAL REVIEW
Section 103(b) of the Act provides that “[t]he Administrative Procedure Act shall apply to all orders establishing, amending, or revoking a Federal motor vehicle safety standard . . . . ” 7 In Automotive Parts & Accessories Association, Inc. v. Boyd 8 we held that this provision sanctions employment by the Secretary of the informal rule-making procedures set out in section 4 of the APA.9 Standard No. 117 was the product of such informal rule-making10 rather than formal adjudicatory procedures under sections 7 and 8 of the APA.11 Petitioner has not challenged the procedures employed by respondent Secretary.
Judicial review of orders establishing motor vehicle safety standards is authorized by section 105 of the Act.12 [35]*35In Boyd we defined the scope of review of standards promulgated through informal rule-making procedures, such as those employed in the instant case:
When the issue on appeal is whether a rule made in informal proceedings meets the criteria of Section 10, the court must necessarily go about the application of that standard in a manner unlike its review of findings of fact and conclusions of law compiled in a formal proceeding.
This exercise need be no less searching and strict in its weighing of whether the agency has performed in accordance with the Congressional purposes, but, because it is addressed to different materials, it inevitably varies from the adjudicatory model. The paramount objective is to see whether the agency, given an essentially legislative task to perform, has carried it out in a manner calculated to negate the dangers of arbitrariness and irrationality in the formulation of rules for general application in the future.13
This is the standard of review which we apply in scrutinizing Motor Vehicle Safety Standard No. 117.
II. RELATION OF THE CHALLENGED STANDARD TO SAFETY
The stated purpose of the National Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act of 1966 is “to reduce traffic accidents and deaths and injuries to persons resulting from traffic accidents.” 14 Thus, “each Federal motor vehicle safety standard . . . shall meet the need for.motor vehicle safety.”15 The Act defines “motor vehicle safety” as “the performance of motor vehicles or motor vehicle equipment in such a manner that the public is protected against unreasonable risk of accidents occurring as a result of the design, construction or performance of motor vehicles and is also protected against unreasonable risk of death or injury to persons in the event accidents do occur . . . . ”16
The general requirement that retreaded tires be labeled with the items of in[36]*36formation specified in paragraph S6.3.2 of Standard No. 117 clearly bears a substantial relation to the Act’s purpose of achieving motor vehicle safety. As the preamble to the publication of Standard No. 117 states:
Size, maximum load, and maximum permissible inflation pressure are required because each is necessary for proper selection and use of passenger car tires.
******
The words “bias/belted” and “radial” are required, where appropriate, in order to identify tires of different types of construction. There is presently a large body of opinion . that mixing tires of differing construction types on the same vehicle or same axle of a vehicle is not in the best interests of safety.
* * * * * *
The words “tubeless” or “tube type” are also required to be labeled onto completed retreaded tires. Almost all of the comments considered this information to be safety related.17
It is indisputable that labeling of tires is necessary to prevent mismatching, overloading, or overinflation, all significant safety hazards.
But the issue here is what relation permanent labeling has to avoidance of those hazards. Petitioner recognizes the importance of labeling retreaded tires with the information required by Standard No. 117, and states:
The retreading industry can and will record such information as is available on a label affixed to the retreaded tire so that the information will be known to the consumer at the time of purchase.18
However, petitioner asserts that the Secretary “has not found that the information required by S6.3.2 can meet the need for motor vehicle safety only if it is permanently labeled into the retreaded tire.”19
A permanent labeling requirement is clearly unnecessary to protect original purchasers of retreaded tires. A non-permanent, affixed label can supply such purchasers with all the information specified in Standard No. 117 and thus permit them to select tires of proper size and construction. Therefore, lack of permanent labeling could become a factor affecting safety only in the event that a retreaded tire is resold or put to some different use after the affixed label has worn off. The Secretary raised this possibility in the preamble to Standard No. 117:
Tires . . . may be subject to many applications during their useful life. They are transferred from wheel to wheel and from vehicle to vehicle, and each time this takes place the information on the tire sidewall becomes important. Permanent labeling is therefore required if the information is to perform its function, as it can be readily assumed that affixed labels will last little longer than the first time the tire is mounted.20
The Secretary has supplied no illustrations or references to the record to amplify these observations. We can hypothesize two situations in which lack of permanent labeling could conceivably affect safety:
1. An original purchaser of retreaded tires wishes to replace one or more of those tires, and he needs to match up his [37]*37new tire or tires with the remaining retreads.
2. Someone wishes to purchase retreaded tires from the original purchaser or from some other second-hand source.
There is no suggestion in the record or briefs of how frequently these hypothetical situations arise. They might occur so rarely that a costly and burdensome permanent labeling requirement geared to ensure safety in such situations is unreasonable. Furthermore, it is not clear that a second-hand purchaser of retreads or an original owner who seeks replacements is dependent on the tires’ labeling for information necessary to proper match-ups, inflation, and loading. The Secretary’s brief observes that an expert can determine many of the critical characteristics of a tire by mere inspection.21 Therefore, even in the hypothetical situations posed above, a permanent labeling requirement may not make a significant contribution to the Act’s goal of enhancing the safety of motor vehicles. If there is a significant nexus between the permanent labeling requirement of Standard No. 117 and the goal of safety, it does not appear in the briefs or in the record of the rule-making proceedings.
As noted above, however, section 201 of the Act22 mandates that new and retreaded pneumatic tires be “permanently and conspicuously labeled” with safety information which the Secretary “determines to be necessary to carry out the purposes” of the Act. The section further provides, “Such labeling shall include . . . (3) the actual number of plies in the tire. (4) the maximum permissible load for the tire. . ”23 Thus, Congress has determined that permanent labeling of ply and load information on retreaded tires bears a significant relation to safety. Although our discussion of the relation Of Standard No. 117 to safety applies with equal' logic to permanent labeling of ply and load information, we must faithfully carry out the express mandate of Congress. No administrative procedure test applies to an act of Congress. Consequently, that portion of Standard No. 117 relating to permanent labeling of ply and load information must stand.24
III. PRACTICABILITY OF THE CHALLENGED STANDARD
The apparently remote relationship between the permanent labeling requirements of Standard No. 117 and the goal of motor vehicle safety might be tolerable if those standards imposed no significant burden on the tire retreading industry. However, there are numerous indications in the record that permanent labeling of retreaded tires with the information required by Standard No. 117 would be economically unfeasible. In the face of these indications, the Secretary offers mere assertions, unsupported by any citations to the record, that the requirements are practicable. Therefore, the Secretary’s Order establishing the permanent labeling requirements of Standard No. 117 is an “arbitrary” agency action that must be set aside under section 10(e) of the APA.25
Section 103(a) of the Act provides that each “Federal motor vehicle safety standard shall be practicable . ” 26 Section 103 (f} further provides, “In prescribing standards under this section, the Secretary shall . (3) consider whether any such proposed standard is reasonable, practicable and appropriate for the particular type of motor vehicle or item of motor [38]*38vehicle equipment for which it is prescribed.”27 The Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit elaborated on the statutory term “practicable” in H & H Tire Co. v. Department of Transportation :28
The House debate on its proposed safety bill suggests that by “practicable” the legislators meant that all relevant factors be considered by the agency, “including technological ability to achieve the goal of a particular standard as well as consideration of economic factors.” 112 Cong.Rec. 19648 (Aug. 17, 1966). The Report of the Senate Commerce Committee recommending passage of the Senate’s version of the safety act, which was the basis for the version ultimately enacted, stated: “The committee recognizes . . . that the Secretary will necessarily consider [in the issuance of standards] reasonableness of cost, feasibility and adequate lead time.” (Citation omitted.) 29
The record in the case at bar contains considerable comment to the effect that the permanent labeling required by Standard No. 117 would be unreasonably costly and economically unfeasible. The basic problem is that most tire casings received by retreaders either do not bear permanent labeling of the information required by Standard No. 117 or are labeled in a location where the markings are subject to obliteration during the retreading process. While permanent labeling of new tires has been required for several years by Motor Vehicle Safety Standard No. 109,30 the location of the labeling was not specified until the Department of Transportation promulgated an amendment, effective 1 July 1973, which requires that one sidewall bear the requisite information between the “maximum section width and bead.” 31 This belated recognition of the practicalities of the retreading process will ensure that the markings are not buffed off during retreading so that, eventually, as the Department explained, “retreaders need not relabel tires in meeting the requirements of Standard No. 117.” 32
The amended requirements for new tire labeling have little impact on the current inventories of new tire casings maintained by the retreading industry. It has been estimated that only about one third of the casings presently in supply bear the requisite labeling in a location where it is not subject to buffing off during the retreading process.33 Therefore, Standard No. 117 would force the retreading industry to choose between two equally undesirable alternatives. First, retreaders might use only those new tire casings that bear the requisite information in a permanent location. This course of action would necessarily result in a two-thirds reduction in the volume of retreaded tire production and inevitably cause severe economic dislocation in the industry.34 Second, [39]*39retreaders could mold the required information into the tire sidewalls during the retreading process. However, the comments of retreaders in the administrative record indicate that this, too, is far from an economically feasible alternative.
Apparently the retreading process cannot be economically adapted to labeling each tire permanently with the seven items of information required by Standard No. 117. Petitioner describes the retreading process as follows:
1. Careful selection and inspection of the casing as required by S5.2.1 and S5.2.2 of Safety Standard 117.
2. Removing the old tread by a process known as buffing which eliminates the shoulder of the tread and provides a smooth surface to apply the new rubber. During this process, any information appearing above the maximum section width of the tire is subject to being removed.
3. Affixing a new rubber surface to the tire by adhesion of the tread rubber to the casing, and
4. Vulcanizing the new tread to the casing in a mold or matrix under elevated temperatures and pressures. While new tires are produced in substantial factory runs where large quantities of tires should be identical, each retreaded tire is a separate and distinct product.35
In order to label tires permanently with the requisite information during this process “it would be necessary for an employee to work with hand-tools on a mold that would have a temperature somewhere between 250 and 300 degrees F. exposing him to the danger of burns in an effort to change the varied plates .with this information on it as each tire is changed in the mold.” 36 Altering the mold plates in this fashion would be necessary for almost every tire run through the production lines, since the size, number of plies, construction, maximum pressure, and other characteristics vary from tire to tire. As indicated by the table appended to Standard No. 117, there are 57 different tire sizes, three basic ply nuníber-ply rating combinations, three maximum inflation pressures, and nearly 100 different maximum loads.37 When the tube or tubeless, bias/belted, and radial factors are added to the mix, the possible combinations of characteristics become virtually limitless.38 Thus, permanent labeling of retreads with the various items specified in Standard No. 117 might be loosely analogized to personalizing a set of wedding invitations by engraving each one with the name of the individual invitee: the engraving plate would have to be changed for each invitation printed. Retreaded tires are usually an economic necessity for the purchaser, not a luxury item.
One retreader has summarized the economic unfeasibility of the permanent labeling requirements specified in Standard No. 117:
As an experiment, we ran a series of casings that had labeling in the shoulder area that would be removed in the retreading process. Our experience has indicated that the best we can do with a relabeling program is to be 80% effective, and our additional cost is more than $2.50 per retread. This is an increase of 30%.39
Of course, the court need not accept at face value the self-serving comments of [40]*40interested members of the retreading industry. However, such comments raise serious doubts about the practicability of Standard No. 117. In the face of these doubts, the Secretary offers only unsupported and unconvincing assertions that the permanent labeling requirements are practicable and economically feasible, and, in so doing, attempts to equate the data required for safety with that already required for record-keeping.40 However, the information required by the Identification and Record Keeping Regulations is significantly different. It consists of such items as the name of the manufacturer and week in which the tire was retreaded.41 With the exception of the latter, these items do not vary from tire to tire as do the items specified in Standard No. 117; the week of retreading can easily be changed at the start of each week while the retreading molds are cool. The Administration’s further suggestion that casings could be sorted into uniform groups before retreading to minimize the frequency of alterations in the retreading mold appears reasonable, but there is nothing in the record to indicate whether such á sorting process would be practicable and not unreasonably costly.
Ultimately the Secretary’s position rests on the following statement that appears in the Administration’s Denial of Petitions for Reconsideration:
Many of the petitions request the NHTSA to furnish data supporting specific decisions and determinations reflected in the standard. The decisions and determinations embodied in this standard are based on all the information at the agency’s disposal, together with the informed judgment and expertise of agency personnel. Documentary materials relating to NHTSA decisions regarding the standard are part of the public docket. The agency is not obliged by law, nor does it consider it appropriate, to categorize or interpret those records as supporting particular statements or decisions made on rule-making issuances.42
While it is true that an agency may act after informal rule-making procedures “upon the basis of information available in its own files, and upon the knowledge and expertise of the agency,” 43 in the case at bar the Secretary’s allusions to information and knowledge outside the record are unpersuasive in light of the powerful doubts raised by the on-the-record comments of petitioner and others about the practicability of the permanent labeling requirements. The Secretary’s statement of the reasons for his conclusion that the requirements are practicable is not so inherently plausible that the court can accept it on the agency’s mere ipse dixit.44 We are compelled [41]*41to conclude that the Secretary’s practicability determination was arbitrary and thus requires us to set aside Standard No. 117 under section 10(e) of the APA.45
IV. CONCLUSION
Under BoycL, our “paramount objective is to see whether the agency, given an essentially legislative task to perform, has carried it out in a manner calculated to negate the dangers of arbitrariness and irrationality in the formulation of rules for general application in the future.” 46 On the basis of the present record, we can only conclude that the Secretary acted in a manner that did not “negate the dangers of arbitrariness and irrationality” when he promulgated the permanent labeling requirements of Standard No. 117. Therefore, we must set aside that portion of Motor Vehicle Safety Standard No. 117, paragraph S6.3.2 which relates to permanent labeling of the following information: the tire’s size, its maximum inflation pressure, its ply rating, and whether it is tube-type or tubeless, bias/belted or radial.
Vacated in part.