|
Support for Car Talk is provided by:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Dear Tom and Ray:
I read your recent column about the relative uselessness of tachometers, especially with automatic transmission. Well, I'm a deaf driver and I showed the column to my hearing impaired husband. The tachometer lets me know the engine is running after I start the car, thus preventing me from grinding the starter. My husband and I drove into the mountains this past weekend, and I have a question about something the tachometer did. We were on a steep incline headed for the mountain top. I had the automatic transmission of our '87 Ford Escort in Drive. The car strained to get up the curving mountain road. Most of the time, the tachometer needle was on two, but at intervals, it jerked up to three or three and a half before returning to two. At the times the tachometer needle jerked, the car also jerked as though the engine was getting a second wind. Since we are deaf, my husband and I can't tell you what the engine sounded like, or if there was any backfiring, but the car has been running fine ever since. Can you tell us what was going on and how serious it is? Tom: Ray: Tom: Ray: Tom: It's NEVER cheaper in the long run to buy a new car. Want proof? Order Tom
and Ray's pamphlet How to Buy a Used Car: Things That Detroit and Tokyo
Don't Want You to Know. To order, send © 1994 by Tom and Ray Magliozzi and Doug Berman Distributed by King Features Syndicate, Inc. Back to the December 1994 index |