Did you recently take on (or consider) a loan of 84 months or longer on a car purchase?
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Perhaps a fuel line was pinched or something like that. Your vehicle should be examined by a pro.
Most important, be glad that you're OK! My dad survived a Camry that spontaneously combust itself.
-juice
We had one towed in where that had happened.
Don't ask me how I know...LOL
-juice
If that's the case, it's the oil change shop's fault.
-juice
Didn't think about the possibility of a car fire, yikes.
-juice
As for the amount you get - well, it is used. Slightly used, but used nonetheless. They're not gonna polish off a new 2003 model because your 2002, even with just 7500 miles, is worth 20% less.
They might help you find a very low mile demo or slightly used one to replace yours, that would be a reasonable demand, IMHO.
-jucie
The light did finally go out on it's own after about seven trips.
Very glad I didn't have to go to dealer again!
Thanks!
However, if it was a defect, they really should honor their warranty. For example, if a piston should go bad and ruin the engine, they would replace the engine...
The problem, of course, is determining the nature of the fire. I agree with other posts - get an independent analysis!
Although that is little consolation to you, Honda has done what is required by their warranty. Could they step up and do more? Of course, but they (and every other manufacturer) would be giving away new cars everyday.
Good luck with your next vehicle.
It sounds like this is being handled correctly. The insurance is covering the claim and they are in turn going after the dealership.
I love these forums and I am happy to keep them up but I do not want to monopolize with my problem, so I won't respond anymore unless there is a direct question. You all can tell how disgusted I am with Honda on this - for small change. Thanks for everyone's help.
There probably won't be any lawsuit involved for you carrier to get paid. Your insurance will be reimbursed through subrogation with Honda's/dealer's product liability insurance carrier.
I know it's a fairly new car and you are upset about not the full amount you paid. But that is an issue to take up with your insurance company, not with Honda. Heck, I'm fighting one now - I wasn't at fault, but it still cost me a few bucks to have my car repaired.
If the dealer turns out to be responsible...sounds like your screwed as your insurance is all that will be available right...then again they may want to at least find a demo 03 for you at no cost...I mean you are very likely to be suffering emotional distress and you'd think they'd hate to mitigate that....
LET US KNOW HOW IT ALL TURNS OUT!
Honda should do more but unless you litigate this with your own attorney you probably won't see the difference in money between what the insurance paid you and what it will cost you to get a new car. Go after the dealers insurnace if you find out that it was the oil change that caused the problems. Going after Honda will be tough unless you have the ability to draw media attention to your plight.
Don't think for one minute that your insurance company's lawyers are looking out for you. HAHAHA!
They only look out for themselves, no matter what they tell you.
At least call an attorney and see if you have a case. it will cost you ~$150 for an hour's time but it will be well worth it if you aren't shelling out 3,4 thousand to buy a new car.
And just to back up Honda and the dealer here, since at this point NO-ONE knows what caused the fire why should anyone take responsibility. Maybe you picked up some flamable debree on the highway that got stuck in some freak place and caught fire? Maybe your ex sabotaged your fuel line overnight. Maybe the whole thing was put together badly in the first place. Maybe you tickec off the sevice station attendant who did your oil change? The point is no-one knows.....yet.
Don't wait to take action. If you don't protect yourself no one else will!
I too have messed up an oil change and ended up with a double gasket. I changed the oil & filter on one of my vehicles, it ran fine for a week, then all of a sudden the oil pressure light came on. I put 2 quarts of oil in, started the car, then watched as it all squirted out in less than a minute, luckily no fire. I then had it towed to my house, jacked it up, double checked my work and found the double gasket. No idea how it ran fine for a whole week before leaking.
The point is you really need to determine the cause of the fire if you want any chance of recovering the difference between what the ins company pays you and what a new CRV costs...assuming it was a Honda defect or dealer negligence.....
Honestely, it is not in Honda's best interest to find out, nor the dealers. In fact it is only worth your ins company's time if there is some glarring negligence that gets them out of paying the bill....and if the dealer has already planted a seed that it was a fluke....well..you really need something conclusive here...I empathize because I am unsure how you get it...lets hope it was the double oil gasket and that the dealer does not try to limit their repsopnsibilty to the value of you CRV at the time of the incident...then you will need to start to threaten to sue for emoional stress etc. to recoup the rest. I'ts sad but thats how our system works. If it was a fluke I guess your stuck but at least came away unscathed. If it was negligence on the dealer, I hope they do the right thing and work something out that is reasonable to both of you. If it is a Honda defect lets pray they resolve it....especially before I decide to buy one...I am looking at small SUVs right now.
GOOD LUCK AND LET US KNOW!
Actually, if you want a real-world example, after we made a claim, rates went up by $300/year for the next 3 years, so it "cost" us $900 to file a claim, on top of whatever deductible you may have.
Say here is $500. That's $1400 out of her pocket over time. Is that fair?
-juice
-juice
1. I don't have an ex so that theory is porbbaly not right.
2. Ins. co has already sued Honda and dealer for subrogation
3. My ins will not penalize me for a no-fault accident (in fact, if they win the subrogation, I get my deductible back)
4. No-one has still told me the reason. Left several messages at Honda Corp, but no replies, even by people who told me they would get right back to me. Will likely have to wait for ins co to make their investigation. The amount is over 20K, so I suspect the ins co will put some effort into this.
5. This car has never been of-road or towed anything or been in an accident. The area where the fire occurred was paved and smooth. Considering it is an SUV (although a small one), I would hope it would take more than a few rocks or even a pirece of metal to start a fire. I checked the area. Found nothing.
5. Things could be worse. I could own a Dodge Durango (anyone see that on the news tonite?). Funny thing, according to the show, Dodge is replacing the failed parts at 30k miles under warranty yet I can't get any satifaction at 8K miles....
Will keep posted
How long ago did this happen? You ins company has sued already...sound like they are on the ball...hard to believe they sued so fast!
- Have they won this suit? If they win then that means that Honda and the dealer are accepting some fault for this issue. If they settle out of court it means nothing substantial.
- This suit is for them to recover their losses. Yes you get your deductible back but....who is representing you and your loss of a perfectly useful vehicle?
4. No-one has still told me the reason.
- That should be a big red flag right there! Get an independent analysis
5. Considering it is an SUV (although a small one), I would hope it would take more than a few rocks or even a pirece of metal to start a fire. I checked the area. Found nothing.
-Should-a, could-a, would-a......it all means nothing at this point. And unless you are a forensics specialist I would not even offer your opinion of what you did or did not find. Get an expert to check it out.
This is my last post on this issue. I was only responding because you seemed to be very outraged that you would have to spend money out of your own pocket to get a new vehicle. But in every subsequent post your vigor seems to lessen. So as my final remarks on this issue.
No one is going to look out for your interests the way you will. If this issue is really as important as you initially made it out to be, then you need to do something proactive about resolving it. If you are happy with taking whatever deal the dealer comes up with go for it. Good luck with your next vehicle purchase and I'm glad you were not hurt in the fire.
Glad to hear some news in the right direction Sabrina, hope they do things right.
LOL about the Durango & Dakota ball joints on the news last night. I've owned several Chrysler products in my young and foolish days and will never own one again.
mikefm58 - luckily here in MA, you can't be denied auto insurance. Any company doing business in the state must insure you. Of course the state sets the rates and there are few discounts. If you have many at fault claims, it just costs you a whole lot more.
Thanks.
But the CRV has the lockout prevention driver's button that is lacking in my vehicles.
Hmmmm!!??
Make: HONDA
Model: CR-V
Year: 2003
Complaint Number: 10042645
Summary:
AFTER HAVING THE SHIFT CABLE LINKAGE CORROSION RECALL REPAIRS PERFORMED, WHILE DRIVING AT 30/35 MPH, VEHICLE CAUGHT ON FIRE FROM UNDER THE WINDSHIELD. THE CAUSE OF THE FIRE WAS UNDETERMINED. *AK
What does anyone think? Obviously I need to get a further copy of the complaint, but this changes things.....
Steve, Host
Pure speculation - perhaps they spray/coat the cable linkage to prevent rust, and the spray itself is flammable. Say some overspray gets on a hot exhaust or something?
But didn't your fire start at the front of the vehicle?
-juice
Now I think I will put them on hold.
I'm not suggesting that any of the above speculation is outrageous or silly, but c'mon folks. I don't think it's quite time to announce that the sky is falling.
I'm sure holding off until then won't do any harm. Recalls often take months to be completed, what's an extra week or two?
Just my opinion, do this at your own risk, no animals were harmed in the formation of my opinion, yadda yadda yadda...
-juice
I checked my CRV this afternoon, it ran fine but it left a 6 inch puddle of oil on the gagrage floor below the right engine bay. The chasis below the filter is soaked with oil and the cat converter appear to have been splashed with oil ( it is dry now).
This is my 4th oil change, don't recall seeing oil on my garage floor before. Will examine it further tomorrow. BTW, the dealer is Gillman Honda in Houston.
Thank you for your advice.