
Encore Puzzler Answer: Toyota Tercel
Ray:
I have for you a 1953 MGT if you can remember last week,s Puzzler.
Time's up.
Tom:
Geeeeeez.
OK, I give up.
Ray:
Bud Omstead from Fayetteville, North Carolina writes:
We helped my daughter and son-in-law buy a nice, used, '89 Toyota
Tercel with A/C, 5-speed transmission, power steering, da da dadada--took it to our trusted mechanic and he said it looked good.
They bought the car, and the only thing they added to the car was one of those
cheap digital glue-on clocks, new floor mats, and a pair of fuzzy dice.
When they drove the car home they stopped at a rest stop, and after their
rest, the car wouldn't start. They turned the key and nada.
No crank. They tried several times and finally the car started.
When they arrived home they called us and told us the problem, and we
called the previous owners and threatened a lawsuit and all that.
They swore up and down that the car had never given them a problem.
And then for a few days after that the car seemed to work OK one day and
not work OK the next day. If they persisted and they kept trying the key,
it would work. They couldn't figure it out. They finally, in desperation,
went to a Toyota dealership and had the car looked at.
Now the daughter tells Dad what the problem was. These are the hints,
because you are going to have to tell me what the problem was with the car.
Tom:
Oh. The daughter goes to the dealership and they figure it out.
Ray:
They fix it. What was it?
Tom:
Simple, simple.
We know it wasn't the stick on clock, unless it was draining the battery.
Ray:
It wasn't the stick on clock, wasn't the high-end fuzzy dice. It had to
have been the floor mats.
Tom:
Surely.
Ray:
This car, as many manual shift cars have a switch, which unenables the starter
motor.
Tom:
Un-enables. Cool
Ray:
It's a starter defeat switch which requires that you step on the clutch
pedal in order to start the car because we're too stupid in this country to...
Tom:
...know to step on the clutch...
Ray:
...when we start the car and they're afraid if some unsuspecting oaff would
start
the thing in gear and crash into somebody else, then the company would be sued
for millions and millions of dollars.
Tom:
Or as I have done, drive into your garage door.
Those garage doors can't take a joke.
Ray:
Not the wooden ones anyway.
So, when she she put these new thick floor mats in, she was interfering
with the operation of this switch and every once in awhile, if she was
angry and put the clutch pedal down especially hard the the car would start
or maybe if the floor mat shifted position. Of course all the dealer did was fling that floor mat into
the back seat and solve her problem.
[ Car Talk Puzzler ]