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Does this mean that t-birds aren't safe in general or was it that particular car? I'm wondering because I'm thinking of buying the model (2004 t-bird), but I don't want it if it acts like Christine.

2007-04-09 07:02:51 · 3 answers · asked by natalie R. 1 in Cars & Transportation Maintenance & Repairs

3 answers

they should recall it soon check out the long list of recalls by ford are you shure you want one??

2007-04-09 07:11:42 · answer #1 · answered by mobile auto repair (mr fix it) 7 · 1 1

Had this same problem with a 1983 Ford. It turned out to be the computer causing the problem. I had to call customer service and threaten a law suite against the dealer to get it fixed, the car was new with only 500 miles on it, and had been taken in for repair 3 times. American cars today or nothing short of being pure junk, your lucky if something doesn't go wrong before the first payment is due.. We use to produce some of the finest cars in the world and were 1/10 th the cost today.

2007-04-09 17:24:58 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

There are way more than 76,000 2004 t-birds on the road. You have a 1 in 76,000 chance of being struck by lightning. Does this mean you won't be going outside anymore?

Get a grip on "statistical significance"! If you want the car, buy the car!

2007-04-09 14:13:07 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

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