The Mercury News

Dear Car Talk:

- By Ray Magliozzi

I had my 2000 Cadillac Escalade towed to the mechanic, and he determined that my battery needed to be replaced. After the new battery was installed, I was informed that the “4-wheel” light on the dash was constantly on, and that the mechanic could not determine the cause. He referred me to a dealership that specialize­s in Cadillacs. When I mentioned to the mechanic there that my vehicle had been hitched from the rear and towed approximat­ely 15 miles riding on the front wheels, he suggested that that could be the cause of the light not turning off, because the vehicle should have been transporte­d riding on top of the tow truck bed rather than being towed with the front wheels on the ground. Could this actually be the cause of the light constantly being on, or could it be a module that needs replacing? — Henry

The dealer is right that all-wheeldrive cars are never supposed to be towed from one end on a hook — they always should be flat-bedded. Any non-knucklehea­ded tow truck driver would know that.

So it’s possible that the towing did do some serious damage. But before you conclude that, there are a lot of other — and much cheaper — things to check.

The first thing I’d check is the switch. There’s a push-button switch on your dashboard that selects between 2WD and 4WD modes. You can try replacing that yourself for about $50. If the light goes off, go out and buy a lottery ticket, because it’s your lucky day, Henry.

If it’s not the switch, you really need to have the car’s computer scanned for stored faults. For instance, a scan could reveal that it’s a faulty solenoid, a failed transfer case actuator motor or a bad computer.

Or, as I said earlier, you could have lunched the center differenti­al when you got towed. That’s thousands of dollars. In that case, you probably could just apply the “black tape solution” to the light and drive the car until it drops. A car that’s old enough to vote is hardly worth putting a new all-wheel-drive transmissi­on in.

If the differenti­al is cooked, the towing took place recently and you know who towed you, you can try making a claim against them in small claims court — if they haven’t closed up shop and fled to Saskatchew­an.

That’s assuming you didn’t tow it yourself, Henry, or give the driver permission to tow it on the front wheels because there was no flat bed available and you really wanted to get home in time to watch “60 Minutes.” I’ll cross my fingers for a bad switch for you.

Dear Car Talk:

I have a 2017 Jeep Cherokee V6 with the automatic stop-start feature. Which is best in the long run: Disable the feature so that the engine continues to run at stoplights, just like all the previous cars I’ve had, or let it shut itself down and then restart when I take my foot off the brake? Is the amount of gas saved at a two- or, very occasional­ly, three-minute stoplight better than the added use of the starter? Does this cause enough added wear and tear on the engine to be concerned about? — Joseph

These stop-start systems are just a few years old now, so I’ll reserve the right to change my mind if evidence to the contrary piles up. But from what

I’ve seen so far, the starting systems have been beefed up enough to handle the extra starts without any sort of long-term issues.

So if there’s really no penalty for stopping and restarting the car when you’re not moving, then why not save the extra fuel — as well as the wear and tear on the engine?

More importantl­y, when the engine is off, you’re not creating any pollution. And in cities, if we collective­ly reduce car-generated air pollution by 3 to 5 percent, that’d be great.

The only reason we’ve had to turn off stop-start systems in cars we test-drive is that they can be annoying. Some are better than others. Many are subtle enough that you very quickly get used to it; others start with a 1.1-Richter shudder that makes you want to run under a doorway to protect yourself. I imagine that all of these systems will continue to improve over time to where they’re not only tolerable, but we basically forget all about them.

So unless the restart is so extreme that it’s causing you neck pain, Joseph, use it, save the fuel and cut the pollution.

Got a question about cars? Email Car Talk by visiting the Car Talk website at www.cartalk.com.

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