San Francisco Chronicle

How to get a newfangled car through the car wash

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Dear Car Talk: I have a 2017 Buick LaCrosse that has the gas- saving feature of shutting off the engine at stops and then restarting when the brake is released. It also has a feature of putting the transmissi­on into park whenever the start/ stop button is pushed to stop the engine; the only way to leave the car in neutral is to leave the engine running. So how do I manage going through a commercial car wash? I asked a salesman at my Buick dealer this question. His response was that the car- wash tracks are wet and, therefore, slippery: “Just leave it in park and let the wheels slide.” That is about the dumbest thing I have ever heard. Is there a way to run the car through a car wash without sliding the tires? The only way I can think of is to leave the engine running, and then the transmissi­on can be put into neutral. — Newton

The salesman’s an idiot, Newton. I mean, I’m an idiot, too, but since this is my column, I’ll call him out first.

Putting the car in neutral is exactly what you should do. If your car wash is the most common type, where the driver stays in the car, then you can leave it running, use the foot brake when you come out the other end, then put it back in drive and go. If it’s a car wash that requires you to exit the vehicle, you may have to open the driver’s door first, before putting the car in neutral, to prevent it from shifting into park automatica­lly when you open the door.

Actually, lots of cars are having trouble getting through automatic car washes these days.

It turns out a lot of the new “autonomous driving” safety equipment is not playing well with these car- cleaning tunnels. For instance, a lot of new cars have a wonderful feature called “automatic emergency braking.” If the car senses an object in front of you — like a stopped car or a human dressed as a tuna fish sandwich — and you don’t brake in time, it assumes you’re distracted and it automatica­lly stops itself for you. Now, what do you think it does when it sees a giant spinning buffer heading toward your grille?

Other cars automatica­lly apply the parking brake if the car is stopped for more than a few seconds. This also is a great safety improvemen­t. It’s prevented people from stepping out of the car without putting the transmissi­on in park first and running over themselves. Hey, it happens!

So for people like you, with newer cars, you’ll have to check your owner’s manual. More and more of them now have instructio­ns for going through an automatic car wash. It’s more complicate­d than in the old days, when all you had to do was give the guy your eight bucks and remember to close the window. Now you often have to disable a bunch of safety features, lest you find yourself at the front of the line, unable to go forward through the car wash, with 16 people behind you getting furious.

I’m not intimately familiar with the 2017 Buick LaCrosse, but if it’ll stay in neutral with the car running, and it doesn’t have those safety features engaged, you should be fine. Hope you can clean yourself up, Newton. ( c) 2017 by Ray Magliozzi and Doug

Berman Distribute­d by King Features Syndicate

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