harvyk
Senior Member
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- Apr 15, 2009
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I would go with opportunistic staffer out for a joyride over some of the other conspiracy theories here. Whilst burnouts and other hooning activities are not exactly good for the car, the car would not have sustained any actual damage with only a few hundred km's. A bigger concern would have been had the police caught the culprits in the act of hooning and thus impounded the car or had the act of hooning wrapped the car around a tree.
As others have mentioned the amount of alleged abuse done by the car park staff is probably similar to what the mechanics do to the car when they take it on their "testing" drives.
I used to be a member of a car forum, and I still remember every so often hearing about people catching their mechanics out. One of the most memorable posts was one when a person was on his way to the mechanic to pick up his car, he was waiting at a set of traffic lights going to pick his car up when his car entered the intersection sideways and then did a massive burnout (which stopped the second the mechanic realized the cars owner was watching on). Needless to say the junior mechanic knocked off work the second he returned the car to the workshop (and probably got out of there quick smart). There was other accounts where mechanics had taken cars on 30km drives to "test" if the indicator lights was working.
So whilst this is hardly a good situation, I would take a guess that this would not be the first time (or at least will be the last time) the car has been driven in a wild way without the owners consent.
As others have mentioned the amount of alleged abuse done by the car park staff is probably similar to what the mechanics do to the car when they take it on their "testing" drives.
I used to be a member of a car forum, and I still remember every so often hearing about people catching their mechanics out. One of the most memorable posts was one when a person was on his way to the mechanic to pick up his car, he was waiting at a set of traffic lights going to pick his car up when his car entered the intersection sideways and then did a massive burnout (which stopped the second the mechanic realized the cars owner was watching on). Needless to say the junior mechanic knocked off work the second he returned the car to the workshop (and probably got out of there quick smart). There was other accounts where mechanics had taken cars on 30km drives to "test" if the indicator lights was working.
So whilst this is hardly a good situation, I would take a guess that this would not be the first time (or at least will be the last time) the car has been driven in a wild way without the owners consent.