It's not just the two rat you have to look out for....

It's not just the two rat you have to look out for....

Author
Discussion

Mr Aston Martin

Original Poster:

478 posts

161 months

Monday 7th January 2013
quotequote all
http://www.news.com.au/travel/news/qantas-sued-ove...


If you ever needed an excuse to take your Aston out!



Lunablack

3,494 posts

163 months

Monday 7th January 2013
quotequote all
I suspect Qantas, airlines smell a rat and will want to chew this one over before they payoutyes

tonyhall38

4,194 posts

217 months

Monday 7th January 2013
quotequote all
yes...but have they crashed yet?

Mr Aston Martin

Original Poster:

478 posts

161 months

Monday 7th January 2013
quotequote all
tonyhall38 said:
yes...but have they crashed yet?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Qantas_fatal_accidents

burntout

1,390 posts

155 months

Monday 7th January 2013
quotequote all
I have seen this type of damage too many times.... One of my customers had a very expensive classic Rolls Royce stored in his lock up and over the winter rats had got in and decided that his seats would make a nice home for the winter.... Wish I had taken some pictures..


Little Donkey

1,544 posts

142 months

Monday 7th January 2013
quotequote all
"emission system service required". I smell a rat. Thought this was a common problem on the vantage???? If something had chewed through the wiring harness, surely it would do more damage than that.

HTB

34 posts

137 months

Monday 7th January 2013
quotequote all
Pinning it on Quantas seems like the easy option; it could have happened anywhere and more likely at home.

I had a 911 with exactly the same issue although probably down to mice rather than rats. Porsche told me they see a lot of this sort if damage on occasionally used and pampered 'garaged' cars, driven only at weekends and holidays. Classic on Boxsters....

Rodents, I was told, find the warmth of engine great (although not so great at full chat on the road and operating temperature I suspect), and make their nests on the engine which stays nicely warm for much longer than we might appreciate, particularly when in a garage. It cost me a new engine wiring loom on my Carrera and a new MAF. I pulled a complete nest out of a '71 911 I restored and a good few handfuls of err...nut shells from the air box. I keep my eye out in my garaged cars now. A cat, or mouse trap is a great garage accessory!

Clearly 1. Rats have great taste in cars 2. Astons taste delicious 3. Australia is more awash with rats than the uk?

burntout

1,390 posts

155 months

Monday 7th January 2013
quotequote all
Little Donkey said:
"emission system service required".
This came up on my dash March last year... It turned out that all the fuel line inside the tank had choroded!!!! All fixed now though and replaced with a much higher grade of hose...

MaverickV12

1,084 posts

139 months

Monday 7th January 2013
quotequote all
TBH, I did not know this was a problem. I have a car in storage and I check on it about every month. Should I turn the heating in the garage off, make it nice and cold?

I think I'm being clever by keeping the garage nice and warm, but am I providing a nice warm home to our furry fiends ....?

Advice please ...........

KEFKEF

78 posts

156 months

Monday 7th January 2013
quotequote all
Had this problem with my old GT3, got the wiring fixed and then bought some ultrasonic alarms that plug into the mains and 'scare' away rodents, never had another problem with my classics or moderns. This could be a 'touch wood' moment now that I have said that......

Lunablack

3,494 posts

163 months

Monday 7th January 2013
quotequote all
MaverickV12 said:
Should I turn the heating in the garage off, make it nice and cold?

Advice please ...........
If you turn the heating off, where do you think the critters might go to keep warmscratchchinsmile

MaverickV12

1,084 posts

139 months

Monday 7th January 2013
quotequote all
Hello Luna,

Thats not the problem, I have had the car in storage for about 2 years, thinking I'm clever, i opened the windows, put a fabric (internal) cover on the car, and the garage was unheated with obvious gaps in the garage doors which gave a soort of a draft / change of air. Bril I think, this will keep the car dry.

All I ended up with was a load, and I mean a lot, of green mould all over the seat belt webbing and the leather seats. It took me ages to get it all off, had to treat the seats etc, sooooo, I put the heating on in the garage, this kept it relatively warm.

Heating on or off .............. ?

Should I put a rat trap in the garage, or check on the car more often, and perhaps take the thing out for a run every now and then, I only did 200 miles in it last year.

Lunablack

3,494 posts

163 months

Monday 7th January 2013
quotequote all
Hard to advise really... Green mould means damp.... Construction materials of the garage will play a big part...

I had a garage with a concrete walls and a corrugated asbestos sheet roof..... Didn't matter what I did, it was condensation city...tools left on the bench would rust overnightfrown

My current place has block built walls, and a tiled apex roof..... Dry as a bonesmile

Type of heating will play its part, oil storage heaters should produce much less condensation than say a gas....

Thinking outside the box...... Get a catbiggrin