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Townsman, 1991-04, Page 40Seeing red! BY KEITH ROULSTON 1 drove down to the city one bright spring day recently and it seemed like the roads had blossomed with bright- ly -coloured Tittle sports cars that somehow never seem to be around in winter...or at least you never notice them. I don't mcan those big North Amer- ican machines that are just a huge motor on a set of wheels, designed to wear out a set of tires on a Friday night for some young stud with more cents than sense. What I'm thinking about at those little cars that put a prc- mium more on maneuverability than horsepower...the kind that somehow looks just right if it's bright red. Which guarantees I'II never have one of those little jobs. It's not just that I'm getting too old for that fool- ishness, that getting out of those buck- et seats is too hard on the ageing body; it's a matter of preservation. I've vowed never to own a red car again. I haven't had good luck with red cars. Take my first new car for instance. Everybody has horror stories to tell about the things that happen to their first brand new car but I figure not many can match mine. My little red car was hardly sporty, just onc of those boxy little cars the Japanese first exported to Canada. Its most attractive feature was the price: $1800 (tells you something about my age doesn't it?). Still 1 was pretty proud of it. I drove it homc from the city to visit my parents onc weekend just after I bought it. We parked it out front of the house and I was showing it off to my father when a neighbour drove by. Japanese cars were an oddity then so he stopped to take a look. We had the hood up and he went to put it down, not realizing it wasn't counterweight- ed like a big North American car but was held up with a prop. He put a nice crease in the hood where the prop was. 40 TOWNSMAN/APRIL-MAY 1991 I was sick that the perfection of my new car was wrecked and worried about getting it fixed but I needn't have worried. A few days later I was driving along Lakeshore Blvd. in the rain, following a car that was follow- ing a street -car. The car pulled out to pass the street -car so I prepared to fol- low by checking over my shoulder to see if anyone was coming. When I turned back, I saw in horror that the strect-car had signalled it was stop- ping and the driver in front had jammed on his brakes. On the wet strcct-car tracks my brakes wouldn't hold and I cased into his rear bumper. Oh well, it had to go to the body shop anyway. We'd had a freak snowstorm by the timc the car was repaired again and it was time to take it in for its first chcck-up. In the garage, whcn the snow melted off, the mechanics found the roof dented in most likely by some kids using it as a landing pad from the roof of a building they played on ncar where I parked the car. I had only 1000 kin on the vehicle -then but I should have traded it on the spot. Things only got worse. We moved back to civilization in western Ontario. One day my car was parked in the lot of my office building and some pubic utilities workmen were working nearby, putting in a new hydro pole. Later in the day I came out to find another dent on the top of the vehicle. No one admitted, of course, that the pole might have gotten out of control as they swung it around. Even at home the vehicle wasn't safe. We lived in a duplex with a neighbour with a big dog and a bigger temper. He got mad at the dog one day and pitched a brick at it. Unfortu- nately he wasn't a very good pitcher: he missed the dog and smashed in the side of my car, On and on and on it went until it finally came time to trade in the vehi- cle. We got a nice, anonymous bluo car and had four years of relative peace. When we needed a new car, however, we were unlucky enough to stop at a dealer who had a bright red car on special. Silly man, I bought it. Six months later my wife was hit and the car demolished. We went back to a safe grey car, then an equally invisi- ble beige van. But two years ago we decided we needed a second car because our daughter was going to be taking a co- op program at her high school and needed a car every other day to get to work. We went to the local car dealer and there on the lot was a nice sporty number. My wife warned me about buying a red car but I confidently pointed out if was maroon, at least in that light. Others over the coming days called it red but I paid them no attention. I wasn't all wrong. No hydro polls have fallen on it. Nobody has hit it with a brick. But two weeks after we bought it the muffler fell off. Since I'd specifically asked the dealer for some- thing reliable because my daughter was going to be driving it and since it had been safety -checked two weeks before, I wondered how such a thing could happen. It was only the begin- ning. The next six months saw every part I had ever heard of replaced on that car at a cost of about $1500. Both our daughters who drive went off to other parts of the province to work last summer so the car sat there and didn't cost me much. But last fall the bearings in no less than both front wheels went. While the wheels were off the mechanics warned me it was only a matter of time before a brake job was needed. Time ran out the other day so I took the car in today to get new bakes installed. When I went to pick up the car the mechanic told me that some other part I didn't know existed was broken. The part alone would cost $125 he said. I'm now ready to admit the car is red...in any light. I've learned my les- son. The next car will be black!