Support for Car Talk is provided by:

Car Talk Columns

October 1998


Dear Tom and Ray:

I don't have a car, so I take the train to work every day. Between the train station and office building, my company runs a shuttle bus, which is a modified passenger van. After getting off the train this morning, I spotted the shuttle bus pulled over to the side of the road, flames leaping -- yes, leaping -- from the engine and passenger compartment, and gray and black smoke billowing out of the windows. The driver hadn't crashed. He just noticed the smoke and fire, pulled over, and got out. Something similar happened to a friend of mine who had a used Dodge car. I'm curious about just how such a thing can happen. How do cars catch fire? -- Alan

Tom: Great question, Alan. We asked our Uncle Enzo, who lives in New [redcar.gif] Jersey, how a particular car catches fire, and he said he could arrange it for us. But I don't think he correctly understood the nature of our inquiry.

Ray: I'd say in four out of five cases, car fires are electrical fires. And they're often caused by exposed wires that went unnoticed after an accident.

Tom: For example, someone will have an accident, and a bunch of wires will get pinched when a fender gets dented in. The body shop will fill up the fender with Bondo, but won't notice that some of the insulation has been scraped off some wires. After a while, the wires start touching and rubbing together and cause a short circuit.

Ray: You may not notice the smoke right away because you're driving 40 miles an hour, and the stuff is blowing right by you. But you're also fanning the flames by adding oxygen as you drive. And before you know it, everything under the hood, including the wire's insulation and all the spilled oil, is burning, and you've got to hurry up and run to the trunk to get marshmallows.

Tom: Sometimes short circuits can be caused by other factors: a repair job where a mechanic connected the wrong wires together or didn't adequately tape up a wiring job, a bad "home repair" (i.e. using the wrong fuse) or even a factory defect in the car's electrical system. But accidents are the most common cause of electrical fires.

Ray: Then there are oil fires. More common than gasoline fires, oil fires can start under the hood when a large amount of oil has been spilled or has leaked onto the hot exhaust manifold. And if the engine gets very hot or overheats, that oil can sometimes ignite.

Tom: Of course, car fires have also been known to start at gas stations, when people leave their cars running and a spark ignites some vapors, or some knucklehead insists on smoking his Tiparillo while refueling. But I assume you were really asking about non-moron-induced car fires, Alan.


What is the most cost-effective way to buy a car? Tom and Ray hash it all out in their pamphlet "Should I Buy, Lease, or Steal My Next Car?" To order, send (check or money order) to Ruin, P.O. Box 536475, Orlando, FL 32853-6475. You can also order online.


© 1998 by Tom and Ray Magliozzi and Doug Berman Distributed by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

Back to the October 1998 index


[Latest | Previous | Next | Random | Search | Browse | ]

Back to Car Talk Columns

Search Car Talk
GO
What Google thinks of Car Talk; the all-time most confounding puzzler?
Meet Car Talk's latest winner — one of the few, the proud, the recently-bathed mechanics.
In the Car Talk Look-A-Like Contest. Ready to take a peek?
What's in your trunk? Here are Tom and Ray's suggestions.
Watch this week's episodes from our new animated TV series, and find local listings.
What happens when you donate your car? Well....