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Special thanks to Dwayne at Carriage Works for sending this story to us!
The battle for Right to Repair legislation has been raging for years. Independent repair shops want access to repair information they need to properly service the newest models. Proponents have been working from coast to coast on both state and national levels. Recently there has been a lot of attention given the cause in the New England area. This comes recently from Massachusetts:
Massachusetts is proving to be a very receptive state for landmark legislation that would protect consumers’ right to choose where they have their cars repaired. The legislation (H4892) would require car manufacturers to provide independent repair shops equal access to the same diagnostic repair information and tools they provide for their dealer mechanics.
Over the course of the session, the legislation advanced further In Massachusetts than it has in any other state or in Congress where it has been pending. Against a coordinated assault by major car manufacturers to kill the Right to Repair legislation outright, the pro-consumer rights bill was reported out favorably from the Consumer Protection and Professional Licensure Committee and made it to the House floor this week. While the formal session ended yesterday, the bill remains active on the House calendar.
Learn more about Right to Repair legislation at www.righttorepair.org.
The media attention has focused on drivers in Corpus Christi, Texas who have seen premature failures of fuel system components, especially fuel pumps. Technicians are seeing late model, low mileage cars and trucks with worn fuel pumps and they're blaming bad gas. More specifically, they're blaming a higher than acceptable (average of 120 parts per million) sulfur content in the gas. More sulfur equals worse than a rotten egg smell from the tailpipe, it can abrasively damage the inside of your fuel pump causing it to wear out early -- very early. There are lots of articles on the problem in Corpus Christi, and some name a specific chain of fuel retailer as the cuprit. The chain, Valero, has denied the claims that they've been serving up bad gas.
There have been similar bursts of sulfur damage. In 1994 Shell had to shut down a number of stations in Florida and Louisiana due to high levels of sulfur in the fuel that resulted in fuel system damage. In other words, the sulfur part of the theory wasn't pulled out of thin air and has been substantiated in the past by the oil companies themselves. Hopefully this is a problem that will stop in the Corpus Christi area, but it's something we should all be aware of. If you replace your fuel pump or install a new fuel filter, and quickly find yourself in the same boat, you could be a victim of bad gas.
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