10.0

really awful
Crashes / Fires:
0 / 0
Injuries / Deaths:
0 / 0
Average Mileage:
0 miles

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problem #2

Sep 262022

E-250

  • miles
When I go to the lake boating, I always remove my battery from the engine compartment and take it with me as a backup in case my boat battery should fail. on September 26, 2022, when leaving the lake, I reinstalled the battery bas I always do and closed the hood. It appeared closed when the hood surface aligned with the side panel. After leaving the boat ramp I turned onto FM 2272 and was accelerating to the posted speed limit of 55. At 40 mph, all of a sudden, the hood flew up into the windshield shattering it from one side of the vehicle to the other. My view of the road was completely obstructed as I was covered in pieces of broken glass. Fortunately, I was able to see the white lane marker through the bottom of the windshield as there was about a 3-inch gap between the bottom of the hood and the bottom of the windshield so I could safely pull my vehicle off the roadway. I know I closed the hood before leaving the boat ramp and even if I hadn't fully closed the hood the secondary hood latch should have prevented the accident from occurring. The secondary. latch is not dependent on the release mechanism and is 100% a mechanical device requiring a person to physically push on the release lever under the hood in order to open it. Had the hood opened while I was on an interstate highway or at night the accident could have been fatal.

- San Antonio (Comal), TX, USA

problem #1

Dec 312019

E-250

  • miles
We purchased a vehicle from gascar auto in miami, Florida on December 31st, 2019. We drove it back to Minnesota. It took us 4 months and over 30 phone calls to get them to send us the title-which they wrote date of sale as 4/19/2020. We just ran the vehicles VIN, (the dealership had also ran a carfax, but not disclosed to us an accident or the discrepancy in mileage) and discovered the odometer had been rolled back to read 100,000 less miles than we were told we were purchasing it with. We were under the impression we were buying what we were told we were buying on the odometer disclosure form, not a vehicle with 100K more miles. Had we known that, and had we known the company would falsify the dates on the title and refuse to give it to us, we never would have purchased the vehicle. They lied on several occasions about sending the title, and it took a notification our attorney was involved to get them to mail it after 4 months. In contacting the dealer today, he told us it isnt his problem because he had "exempt" written on the front of the title. However, he did fill out the odometer disclosure, he did falsify the date of sale, and he did sell us a title that had apparently originally been purchased by his dealership more than 1 year prior, though he never transferred the title to the dealership from the previous owner. I am including documentation of all of this.

- Buffalo, MN, USA