If you own a vehicle with an electronic parking brake, make sure you actuate it from time to time. Otherwise, you may be in for an expensive surprise when it comes time to replace the rear brake pads. A $200 job could easily turn into greater than $1000 due to the parking brake mechanism becoming seized. Actually, the parking brake should be used every time the car is parked. Frozen parking brakes are due to disuse and just about nothing else. The transmission park position should never be trusted to hold the vehicle. Personally, I know of two instances of failure of the park position in the transmission to hold the vehicle. One resulted in a fatality and another in an injury. The parking brake is there for a reason. Use it and be safe.
Archive for the ‘Driving Tips’ Category
Electronic Parking Brakes
Thursday, January 12th, 2012How to Save Money on Car Repairs
Wednesday, July 20th, 2011There is a an easy way to save money on auto repair and here it is – pick a shop you trust and do all of your business there. Why not shop around? There are a number of reasons why shopping around costs more money in the long run. For one thing your time has value. Not only does it take time to shop around, but the time spent trying to resolve a problem with a repair can be enormous and cause a lot of anger. Think about that. The last shop to touch the vehicle is suspect in anything that goes wrong with it. Say you had a water pump replaced at shop A, an oil change done at shop B, and a check engine light repaired at shop C, all because you determined who was cheapest for those repairs. And then a coolant leak developed a couple of days after the last repair. Guess who is the suspect? Shop C was the last guy to touch the vehicle. Now he has to prove that he didn’t cause the problem, so he sends you back to where the water pump was replaced at shop A. Their contention is that shop B nicked a hose while changing the oil. Nobody wants to take ownership of the problem and meanwhile your pot is starting to boil. This problem may never get resolved. If you do all of your repairs at one shop, the likelihood that they will bend over backwards to keep you as a customer is high. I have been in this business for 40 years and have repaired issues for good customers that were either just over the warranty period or even for things I had nothing to do with. Many good shops out there do the same for their customers. I am not advocating having blind faith in a shop, but the shop should be your trusted advisor concerning car repairs. By all means, ask questions because it is your right to know, but if you are feeling like your business is being taken for granted, find another shop. The best way to do that is to get a referral from someone who is happy with the shop they are using. I have one plumber, one electrician, one landscaper, and one machine shop, etc. I’ll do business with those folks until they give me a reason not to. Sometimes the job is more than they can handle and that is fine, but then I ask for a referral. If they are good people, I know they will refer me to good people. If they refer me to a knucklehead, their own reputation is on the line. So, if you want to save money on car repairs, pick a shop, any shop, one you can trust and who has your best interest at heart. Happy Motoring!
Drivers and Aging
Tuesday, May 17th, 2011Consumer Reports cites research published by the American Psychological Association, on the online journal Neuropsychology that finds as we get older our reaction times slow down. No surprise there. Making people aware of that fact is a good thing, but younger drivers need to be aware of this situation too. It is important for everyone to take the responsibility to develop good driving habits and to practice defensive driving. This means being aware of what is going on around us at all times, a strategy called situational awareness. Seems kind of obvious, but there are all kinds of distractions out there competing for our attention. Cell phones, GPS, radios, loud passengers, an unhappy infant to name a few can create dangerous situations. Situational awareness extends to anticipating what other drivers may do. No one can predict the future, but the behavior of other drivers can give us a clue to what they may do next. My father in law used to ask me what it meant when somebody extended their left arm out the window. I made the mistake of saying they were going to make a left turn. He would say “no, it just means they have their left arm out the window”. Of course, he was right. I got to thinking about that and realized that we tend to make assumptions that get us into trouble. Even a turn signal flashing only means that a turn signal is flashing. It doesn’t mean the driver is going to turn. If someone applies the right turn signal coming to an intersection, we can’t be sure he will turn right or even turn at all . What happens if we try to pass him on the left and he decides that he is going to make a left? Bam! A stop light doesn’t mean another driver will stop. The problem is that we get used to and expect drivers to behave a certain way. We become complacent and complacency breeds contempt, meaning we keep assigning a lower level of risk to a situation until it one day bites us. Next time you are rounding a blind corner on a road you drive everyday, ask yourself whether you could really execute an avoidance maneuver if you had to. Remember, it takes time to recognize a dangerous situation, assign a level of risk to it, and to react. Meanwhile the car is being propelled at the same speed at which you entered the turn. At just 30 mph you are moving along at 44 feet per second. if it takes 1 second to assess the situation and move your foot to the brake, you have traveled 44 feet. That is before the car even begins to slow. Stopping distances are longer in turns because the tires need to handle the change in direction as well as to scrub off speed. There is only so much traction available and they can’t do both to maximum effect. The other variables are tread depth and the age of the tires. Tire Rack ran some tests on stopping distances versus tire tread depth and the results are rather startling. Getting back to older drivers, we must make the assumption that their ability to recognize a situation is going to take more time. Even if they can get their foot to the brake as quickly as they did 20 years before, the stopping distance is still going to increase dramatically. How can we handle this? Be aware of who is in the driver seat and how they are behaving behind the wheel. Don’t make assumptions about anything. I don’t know who coined this poem, but it is appropriate for almost any situation whether pedestrian, bicyclist, motorcyclist, or car driver:Here lies the body of William JayWho died maintaining his right of wayHe was right, dead right, as he sped alongBut he’s just as dead as if he were wrong,Wishing you safe and enjoyable motoring