brownsfan1 wrote:
The burden of proof is on him. He just thinks it caused the problem? Or has a dealer looked at it and pointed the finger. I just don't see this as being remotely possible. Was a tharness used? Any wires need to be cut as part of the installation? I can't remember off the top of my head. |
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He thinks we caused it. I did contact Fortin Tech support and they confirmed that they have never had any vehicle respond this way for their Evo-All bypasses and the rep further confirm what I already knew which was that there is no way the bypass take control of the cause that would result it it braking by itself.
davep. wrote:
Cars stop running for a myriad of reasons all the time. In California, he who hits from the rear is at fault. Whether the RS caused the stall or not is irrelevant to placing liability for the accident. Hopefully you have a garage-keeper's policy. Let your insurance co figure it out if it comes to that. It shouldn't. |
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Unfortunately, I don't have insurance but I do have an extensive pre-inspection checklist that I go thru w/ the customer on every vehicle I work on and they sign before & after the work is done to confirm everything was working as it was.
tonanzith wrote:
Possible, yes. Probable, no. Either way, ditto. The rear ender is at fault regardless of cause. |
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You think it's possible for a bypass to cause a car to brake by itself? I thought most bypasses receive a brake signal not send out...
howie ll wrote:
Same in the UK, vehicle behind is at fault, out of interest are any ignition wires cut on the install? Note I said CUT not JOINED to. |
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No wires had to be cut. I misspoke earlier when I said it was a 2009 Charger, It was actually a 2007 Charger. I did a twist and wrap w/ 3M electrical tape followed by zip tie on all my connections.