Beware of hurricane-affected vehicles up for sale
Houston is the fourth-largest city in the U.S., but it has the secondhighest car ownership numbers, at 1.8 per household, trailing only Dallas. When hurricane Harvey delivered its deadly blow recently, many of those cars — estimates go as high as a million — were destroyed, along with tens of thousands of homes. It may be difficult to tally the ongoing human costs of such destruction, but every part of the recovery is dependent on replacing many of those vehicles.
If you look at pictures during the storm, it’s stunning: cars submerged, cars floating, cars stranded on highways now turned into thundering rivers. And yet, just a few days later, with the flood waters subsided, it’s hard to believe the water was once up to the eaves of suburban homes. Like many of those homes, the cars may look OK from the outside, but they are writeoffs. And just like after hurricane Katrina and Sandy and others in years past, those flood cars will show up by the tens of thousands across the U.S. and even in Canada, sold to unwitting buyers. Buyers who should know better.
Those flooded cars will have electrical systems so compromised they will be dangerous, if they can even be rehabbed enough to start. That’s before you get to the corrosion that will be setting in and destroying the bodies and frames. Once you get them across state — and country — borders, title washing increases.
Those flooded vehicles are totalled, but unscrupulous salvagers will dry them out and sell them to those who have few options. They’ll also sell them to those who can’t pass up a deal too good to be true. As a buyer, how do you protect yourself?
The Automobile Protection Association rarely endorses buying a car from the U.S., unless it is a collector or rare find. At the very least, they recommend doing extensive homework on the purchase. When you can find the same make and model here in Canada, you will be buying it with the consumer protections of this country, and it will adhere to our standards.
Flooded cars will have telltale signs that, even with a cursory view, will tell a story. Jeremy Young, operations manager at Krown Rust Control, says that rust forms immediately.
“Look at the bottom edges of body panels,” he says. “There are drain holes and the paint will become discoloured where rust is leaking out. If salt water is the culprit, even if it’s been sprayed off or vacuumed from carpeting, it will return fast. Salt forms a chemical bond.”
He acknowledges the No. 1 place for damage is in the electrical system.
“Disconnect the back of the headlight. Right at the connection, there’s two wires and a clip. Undo that, and take a look. You’ll see corrosion.”
The best advice about buying a used car is always the same: get an independent mechanic to get it up on a hoist. He or she will know why this hot car is such a great deal, and steer you away from it.