|
Support for Car Talk is provided by:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Dear Tom and Ray:
I moved to upstate New York from California this past winter, and I've already noticed two problems with my Toyota Tacoma pickup: 1) a dearth of bikini-clad women in my truck, and 2) an abundance of rust and salt buildup on the undercarriage. The salt has completely encrusted the padlock I have on my spare tire (which is mounted underneath the bed), so I wouldn't be able to get at it in an emergency. Is there anything I can do to avoid this rust buildup, or should I just sell the truck before I move back to California? -- John
Ray: Well, I'm much more concerned about the lack of bikini-clad women than about the rust, John. Tom: Rust is an unfortunate byproduct of winter in the great frozen North. Snow falls, and then the local towns and cities dump enough salt on the roads to raise the blood pressure of the inhabitants of several former Soviet nations. When the water from the melting snow and the salt from the roads mix with the metal of your car, the result is rust. And there's not a helluva lot you can do about it. Ray: If you live where it snows occasionally, you can take your car to a car wash after a storm and wash the undercarriage to get rid of the salt. But if it snows a lot, there might be salt on the roads for most of the winter, making it almost impossible to keep up with. Tom: So, I'd just plan to sell the truck before moving back. Upstate New Yorkers will expect to see some rust on any used car they buy, so you shouldn't have trouble selling it. And in fact, since it spent part of its life in California, it might be in better shape than many others. Ray: But get under there and cut off that padlock, John. You need to have access to your spare tire in an emergency. And don't worry about anybody stealing your spare tire in that part of the country. Would you lie down in all that slush and salt muck to get under a truck to steal a spare tire? I didn't think so.
© 2003 by Tom and Ray Magliozzi and Doug Berman Distributed by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
Get your question answered. |
Afraid of you might be buying "someone else's troubles"? Tom and Ray lead you step by step through the process of finding and buying a great used car in their booklet, "How to Buy a Great Used Car: Secrets Only Your Mechanic Knows." To order, send $4.50 (check or money order) to Used Car, P.O. Box 536475, Orlando, FL 32853-6475, or buy all of Tom and Ray's booklets online.