The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

Car Doctor Q&A

- — John Paul, Senior Manager, Public Affairs and Traffic Safety, AAA Northeast

Q

We had an incident where our 2019Toyota Corolla with only 5,000miles suddenly accelerate­d over a curb and sped forward when parking at a storefront causing damage to two storefront windows and the car. A police officer on scene suggested it could have been a “surge”. Upon researchin­g and talking to other people apparently this is quite common. Apparently on a car with a small engine (1.8liter) when the air conditione­r engages the engine speed increases to compensate for the new load. Is there any way the car can be diagnosed to determine the cause and correct the problem? We are afraid to drive the car with the air conditione­r on.

A

Smaller displaceme­nt engine can surge slightly and cause the engine speed to pick up a bit but in the hundreds of vehicles that I have driven not enough to overcome the foot brake. To drive over a typical six-inch curb would take quite a bit of accelerati­on far more than an engine surging from the air conditione­r cycling. In addition, since 2012 Toyota as well as many other manufactur­ers have added throttle override devices which disable the throttle when the brake is applied. Not being there it is hard to say what happened. A possible scenario is, the engine did surge slightly while the driver’s foot was on the brake, the driver got confused and applied the accelerato­r rather than pushing harder on the brake pedal. The good thing is no one was hurt, the car and the building can be repaired. Q

My mechanic has been working on my car for years, he is a great guy with fair prices and does good work. The problem is each time I get the car back there are greasy fingerprin­ts on the car. Over the years the grease stains have become darker, and I can’t clean them off. Any suggestion­s?

A

Depending on how set in the stains there are some things you can do. Start with dish detergent mix about 50⁄50 with water and seen if the detergent cuts through the stains. Wd-40lubrican­t may also work to remove the stain, in both cases clean the surface with a microfiber cloth. I have even seen soap, water and kerosene mixed together to remove grease and tar. If this doesn’t work, you may need to use a high-speed buffer and light polishing compound and remove a very slight amount of paint to clean up the staining. Then once it is clean, polish the car with a quality wax. Rather that tackle it yourself and possibly do more damage, stop by a vehicle detail shop and ask them if they can clean and then polish the entire car. Wax adds a layer of protection that seals the paint against staining. Once the car is clean buy your mechanic a fender cover.

Q

I was talking to some of my fellow Rotarians about electric cars and was wondering if you would be willing to talk with us about electric cars, hybrids and how and where you recharge these vehicles. Due to Covid we are still meeting remotely, would you come to a Zoom meeting and chat about these vehicles? And it there any charge for your appearance­s?

A

I would be happy to chat with your group about anything automotive related. Regarding fees, pre Covid I used to ask for a cup of coffee, but now not even that. For the past 18 months just about any presentati­on that I do is remote using Zoom or a similar platform. As good as in person events are, the virtual presentati­ons allow me to “travel” anywhere. Readers send me an email (jpaul@aaanorthea­st.com) and I would be happy to join your meetings.

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