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Car Talk Columns

January 1997


Dear Tom and Ray:

On September 27, after years of deliberation, I decided to purchase my first new vehicle; a white, 1997 Ford Ranger extended cab pickup -- automatic, 4.0-liter engine and rear ABS. About two miles from the dealership, I brake fairly hard to slow for traffic and the truck bounces and thunks as if I have run over a large object in the road. About four miles, and several lesser thunks later, I brake going into a bumpy curve. Another big thunk and bounce. OK, maybe my spare tire is loose underneath and it's bouncing. About nine miles from the dealership, I approach the street to my house. Braking from 55 mph, the truck suddenly sounds like a blender making a nuts and bolts milkshake and decelerates at the speed of light as I round the corner. It dies. A woman in a car stops immediately and asks if I need a ride, because she can see the driveshaft sitting on the pavement underneath the truck. I say no thanks. I'm only about 700 feet from my house, and besides, I need some screaming time. Actually, I never got upset. It was amusing, and I had a three-year, 36,000 mile warranty that I was only one hour and less than 20 miles into. Here are my questions: What happened? What are the odds of this happening? What are the odds of it happening to me? Ford is getting me a new vehicle, but shouldn't they tangibly compensate me in some fashion for this horrendous ordeal? Perhaps a bed liner, a passenger side air bag, or maybe one of those Christmas-tree air fresheners you hang from the rear-view mirror. What do you think? -- Robert

Ray: I think the executive committee of the Ford board of directors is[bluecar.gif] debating the air-freshener option as we speak, Robert.

Tom: Someone forgot to tighten some crucial bolts on your little Ranger. That's what happened. It sounds like your truck came down the assembly line late on a Friday afternoon, possibly just before a long holiday weekend.

Ray: The bolts that hold the driveshaft to the pinion flange weren't secured, and it took them about nine miles to work their way out. That must have been very exciting!

Tom: It probably doesn't happen very often. I'd say the odds of this happening are approximately 49,467 to 1.

Ray: And the chances of it happening to you are about 1,486,934 to 1 -- slightly worse than your chances of hitting it big in the sub-Sahara-tri-desert-state lottery. So I guess congratulations are in order, Robert. I'll bet you didn't know you were such a lucky guy!


Wait! Don't buy another car without the mechanic's checklist that's included in Tom and Ray's pamphlet "How to Buy a Great Used Car: Secrets Only Your Mechanic Knows." It will help you get a good used car and avoid the clunkers. To order, send (check or money order) to Ruin, P.O. Box 536475, Orlando, FL 32853-6475. You can also order online.


© 1997 by Tom and Ray Magliozzi and Doug Berman Distributed by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

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