Posted on 12/10/2008 12:38:19 PM PST by Stoat
I love it when they catch these guys. Had a 1978 Ford Bronco stolen from my driveway in the middle of the day - never found.
Why would anyone steal a Dodge Magnum? That turkey looks like a hearse!!!
‘#8 2005-2007 Hummer H2. 8.7 stolen per 1,000. Average claim: $18,791. ‘
I’ve got one. Don’t understand how the ‘average claim’ is 18,791, given the cost ‘off the lot’ is close to 70K.
This is the least stolen car.
I don't believe that I will be able to comment on your entirely valid and supremely relevant question because doing so would most likely cause me to be classified as a Racist And Perpetrator Of Hate Speech by the incoming Administration. I have no desire to spend the next four years (at minimum) in prison because they will also take the stoatmobile away from me and give it to a "deserving, underprivileged member of The Community."
"A deserving, underprivileged member of The Community".
I'm guessing that for these average claim figures they are factoring in not only the vehicles where the full replacement value was claimed but also those which were only damaged and / or recovered and required far less than full replacement value in the insurance claim.
Hmmm. I guess thats what it is.
The Dodge Magnum is my favorite of the current Chrysler body styles, with the exception of the new Challenger.
Yeah, you could. Most of them have computer chip keys that are supposed to make them harder to steal... but their chip readers break so often that bypass information is freely available on the net and many owners do it as a precautionary measure!
“Foreign” cars are actually more common... but since the demand for their parts is lower, seeing as how they break less, there’s less reason to steal them in general.
Because a large pecentage of Magnums are outfitted with wheels and stereo systems worth more than the rest of the car.
In contrast, both our Volvos blew their engines (one oil pump failure, another threw a rod) and we used to have a Triumph (nuf ced).
Um, if the Volvos came from the 90s or later, they’re Fords.
Ford trucks seem to do okay, but most of their cars are just miserable. By the way, have you had the fire recall done on your Ford trucks yet?
One of the Volvos was an '84 the other was a '96 850 Turbo (which was the street sleeper of all time, it would blow the doors off almost anything. But - a FIVE-banger?).
I know tons of people with F-150s (it's the standard ride for hunting retriever people - fits three or four dog crates in the back depending on how you configure it) and EVERYBODY loves them, nobody's had any problems with them. Our neighbors on both sides have F-150s, one has almost 300K miles on it and no problems.
Our last Ford car was a '69 Torino, and that was a great car. We put over 250K miles on it and sold it for what we paid for it.
The Windstar we had was a dog, though. Never buy the first model year of ANYthing. At least it was all fixed under warranty.
Almost all the Windstars were crap, even the “fixed” ones... which weren’t. They renamed it the FreeStar, but people still avoided it when they found out it was a Windstar with all the Windstar problems.
It was so bad, Ford no longer sells a minivan of any kind because it drove all the customers away.
Used to be an arson investigator, let's say I'm a skeptic whenever anybody makes that sort of sweeping claim.
The little kid posed next to the vehicle is a dead giveaway that somebody is after money. I can hear the plaintiff's lawyer making the closing argument right now.
Hey, at least the car thieves appreciate US auto companies!!
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