Friday, November 7, 2008

On the road: dead cars here, dead cars everywhere

What do you do when you buy a new car? For one thing, you trade in your old one. But have you ever wondered where your old car ends up? Used cars don’t last forever. One day, your old car will die. If it dies in the city, it will be hauled to a junk yard. But if it dies in the country, it will be hauled nowhere; it will remain where it dies -- along the road, in back of a store, or in a front yard.

Travel the back roads as I do, and in a year's time you will see 20 dead deer, 50 dead jack rabbits, 3 dead coyotes, 22 dead snakes, 35 dead squirrels, 17 dead skunks, and 5,000 dead cars. I believe that in 50 years people will consider our present day automobiles primitive. If you really think about it, they are already primitive. But they’re the best thing we currently have for personal transportation.

Cars break down a lot because there are so many moving parts. Auto makers have improved the performance of cars through the years, but in doing so they have made them so complicated that a backyard mechanic can no longer do his own repair work.

My first car, a 1958 Volkswagen, was a bit more powerful than a go-kart, but I could do a lot of the mechanical work myself. Now, with all sorts of sophisticated electronic gizmos, you need a Ph.D. in mechanical engineering to figure out what to do when something goes wrong. Someday they’ll look back at our slow, gas-eating, polluting vehicles and laugh -- sort of like the way we think of Stanley Steamers today.

1 comment:

  1. I disagree on cars are too complicated for the average person to work on. The newer cars 96 and up have a OBDII connector close to the steering column. It doesn't bite, use it, it has all the information there that tells you whats wrong with your car, SUV, or pickup. Even my 89 Lebaron had all the codes without using a code reader just by reading the check engine light flashs. They even have a Scan Gauge II that will tell you all kind of information including current MPG, as well as the codes, and will reset your check engine light after you fix it. I'm 59 years old and haven't been stumped yet by how to fix my vehicles. For that matter if you can read, interpret, and have decent motor skills you can do anything with the proper tools which you can borrow, rent or buy.

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