
May 1996
Dear Tom and Ray:
The radiator on my 1989 Mercury Marquis with 67,000 miles needed replacing,
and, much to my surprise, it was plastic. It was a bigger surprise when a
new one cost $429.89 plus labor. Please give me your opinion on plastic
radiators. Is Ford just using this cheap plastic radiator to save money? --
Earl
Ray: They're not doing it to save money, Earl. It's the weight they're
interested in saving.
Tom: Plastic radiators weigh a lot less than their metal predecessors, and
therefore help to increase gas mileage. And the truth is, they're just as
good as metal radiators.
Ray: The whole radiator isn't plastic, just the tanks. The fins (the parts
between the tanks that actually radiate the heat) are still made of
aluminum or copper. And those are the parts that corroded and caused your
radiator to stop working. The plastic parts probably didn't fail at all.
Tom: Having said all that, you certainly did get "hosed" (to use radiator
terminology) on the price. You bought original parts, and had the work done
at a Mercury dealership, so you paid top dollar.
Ray: Had you gone to a local independent repair shop, they could have put
in a good, aftermarket radiator, like a Modine. And that would have saved
you several hundred dollars. So radiate on that possibility for next time,
Earl
It's NEVER cheaper in the long run to buy a new car. Want proof? Order Tom
and Ray's pamphlet How to Buy a Used Car: Things That Detroit and Tokyo
Don't Want You to Know. To order, send (check or money order) to Ruin, P.O. Box 536475, Orlando, FL 32853-6475. You can also order online.
© 1996 by Tom and Ray Magliozzi and Doug
Berman Distributed by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
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