You should always set your parking brake, even in non-Chrysler vehicles. Not using it, or using it only sparingly, allow the cables to corrode faster, which can cause it not tighten as well and/or snap the cable. Pretty much everything I've read or heard says it is a very good safety practice, as we see the Park position in an automatic transmission doesn't always mean the car isn't going to move.
'This world may be another planet's hell.'{Aldous Huxley}
'After silence, that which comes nearest to expressing the inexpressible is music.'{Aldous Huxley}
For copyright purposes, all of my posts are covered under the "Do What The Fuck You Want To Public License"
http://sam.zoy.org/wtfpl/
Noone should sue or be sued ambiguously.
If you're using it regularly, the stretching/constricting breaks up rust on the cable. If you aren't, it can build up, and that buildup is what causes problems.
From the latest reports, it may not be a Chrysler transmission issue, though. The Jeep in question has an electronic transmission, and one of the problems that prompted the recall is it can be unclear to the user that the car isn't in Park. I find it a little difficult to believe that he could get out of a car on an incline and not notice immediately that it was moving (or get between it and the gate before it hit the gate), but the investigation should find out the exact circumstances.
Today we sail
On the Solar Rail
For there's much we just don't know
So farewell with a kiss
Then it's fast for the mist
Till we're sleeping in the cold below
For copyright purposes, all of my posts are covered under the "Do What The Fuck You Want To Public License"
http://sam.zoy.org/wtfpl/
Noone should sue or be sued ambiguously.
I lived in SF for a year, just after getting my drivers license.
Using the parking brake becomes ingrained into the very fiber of your being when you start your "car career" on the slopes of the bay.
Very sad end for him, indeed![]()
"Silver bullet solutions are rare, silver bullet sales commonplace"
It depends on how you are parking. If you are parking facing down the hill, turn your steering wheel to the right so that they rest against the curb and, if for some reason your car's brakes fail or transmission engages, you'll stick to the curb.
If you are facing up the hill, turn your wheel to the left, and let your car reverse slowly into the curb from the front tires. Same idea, but this way the carried moment of a failed transmission won't first allow your car to rise over the curb form the back tires as your front tires turn the front of the car away from the curb.
And yes, always use the parking brake.
Here's the lawsuit! http://money.cnn.com/2016/06/23/news...ler/index.html
The money line:
Originally Posted by Article excerpt
That could hit them hard in a court room. A warning when honestly the problem this well known should have had a full and proper recall in progress. Naturally as with many industries it usually takes a death or three to kick a company into gear.
Today we sail
On the Solar Rail
For there's much we just don't know
So farewell with a kiss
Then it's fast for the mist
Till we're sleeping in the cold below
Yeoch. Not good.
A buddy of mine spent decades working as an engineer in the auto industry (R.I.P Mr.C) and every, EVERY model of car made at every manufacturer he had worked for (5 of them, I believe) automatically had money put aside for this shit.
They were *not* saving money by not putting out a recall notice. The CAPEX had already been allocated and locked away to cover these costs. Putting the money aside was the only way to ensure that things missed in testing didn't affect the profit margin in a given year. If the money was already "spent", they could get more accurate trending metrics.
The only thing they stood to not lose is the slight, SLIGHT possibility that a recall *might* given them some short term bad press, which is absolutely nothing compared to a suit like this.
Ridiculous.
For copyright purposes, all of my posts are covered under the "Do What The Fuck You Want To Public License"
http://sam.zoy.org/wtfpl/
Noone should sue or be sued ambiguously.
Returning to our regularly scheduled thread topic:
Ralph Stanley, father/popularizer of bluegrass music.
89, no details.
Since I do not really know BlueGrass I am not sure who that is. But holy fuck this year is bad in general for music.
Today we sail
On the Solar Rail
For there's much we just don't know
So farewell with a kiss
Then it's fast for the mist
Till we're sleeping in the cold below
Carlo Pedersoli, italian olympic swimmer, 86.
😞
RIP two sports legends - Pat Summitt and Buddy Ryan. Summitt probably belongs on a coaching Rushmore somewhere.