Dr.Jass
Pastor of Muppets
A friend of mine related a tale to me that made me do this: [smilie=e:
He went fishing a couple weeks back, doing the boat-hauling with his mid-'90s F150. He and his father had a great day, until the time came to pull the boat out of the water. He backed the trailer in, loaded the boat, and went to pull out of the water... no go. The truck was stuck in park.
They fought with this thing for quite some time, partially flooding the interior and unable to get the thing in gear (or neutral). Of course, there are others wanting to use the boat ramp, but he's blocking it and immobile. Finally, his Dad dragged the whole deal kickin' and screamin' out of the way: F150 exteneded cab 4x4, 17" aluminum bass boat (live wells, 80HP outboard, multiple batteries, etc), and trailer out of the way with his own truck. Impressive feat with the F150 stuck in park.
What was the problem? A 25-cent fuse. What caused it? The boat-trailer wiring shorted out, which popped the brake-lamp fuse. On that truck (and I'm sure many others), the park/brake-pedal interlock is operated on the same circuit as the brake lamps... so when the short popped the fuse, the truck went nowhere. It may be OK on some vehicles, I guess, but on vehicles designed to pull trailers you'd think they'd take into account things like boats, water, and the fact that trailers often have patch-job wiring.
I'm not bashing the Ford, really, since I'm sure many, if not most, American vehicles with that ridiculous, superfluous interlock system are designed the same way... I guess I'm more lamenting the fact that we live in a litigious society where vehicular laws are defined by insurance companies, and so we require mechanical replacements for common sense.
Sorry... was I ranting again?
He went fishing a couple weeks back, doing the boat-hauling with his mid-'90s F150. He and his father had a great day, until the time came to pull the boat out of the water. He backed the trailer in, loaded the boat, and went to pull out of the water... no go. The truck was stuck in park.
They fought with this thing for quite some time, partially flooding the interior and unable to get the thing in gear (or neutral). Of course, there are others wanting to use the boat ramp, but he's blocking it and immobile. Finally, his Dad dragged the whole deal kickin' and screamin' out of the way: F150 exteneded cab 4x4, 17" aluminum bass boat (live wells, 80HP outboard, multiple batteries, etc), and trailer out of the way with his own truck. Impressive feat with the F150 stuck in park.
What was the problem? A 25-cent fuse. What caused it? The boat-trailer wiring shorted out, which popped the brake-lamp fuse. On that truck (and I'm sure many others), the park/brake-pedal interlock is operated on the same circuit as the brake lamps... so when the short popped the fuse, the truck went nowhere. It may be OK on some vehicles, I guess, but on vehicles designed to pull trailers you'd think they'd take into account things like boats, water, and the fact that trailers often have patch-job wiring.
I'm not bashing the Ford, really, since I'm sure many, if not most, American vehicles with that ridiculous, superfluous interlock system are designed the same way... I guess I'm more lamenting the fact that we live in a litigious society where vehicular laws are defined by insurance companies, and so we require mechanical replacements for common sense.
Sorry... was I ranting again?