flea, were you the one asking about this?
Clough, who's also an earthquake engineer, said the geography of the Eastern Seaboard helped transmit the shock from the Carolinas to New England. The underlying bedrock is largely a solid sheet, "so you get a lot more travel out of earthquake waves than you would in California," he said.
GM and Chevy are replying to me on Twitter that they'd be happy to help. So I replied that I called them for help, and they don't call back. Ever. I hate this, "I look like I care in public" bullshit.
So I replied that I called them for help, and they don't call back. Ever.
Well, that's actually promising. You're embarrassing them in public, so they're more likely to do something about it.
If you don't eventually get help from them, you need to get your car back and find a mechanic who will make the fix illegally. That part will be in the junkyard and it can be gotten and put on in a jiffy. Really. Just don't tell the dealer that's what you are doing.
I agree with Scrappy, Allyson. It's out of warranty anyway.
I'm a bit surprised that the East coast had an earthquake.
Well I hope that there was no major damage.
suela, that's actually the most awesome thing someone has said to me all day. I want to embarrass them.
Scrappy, I hear you, and I've been on the case for a used part.
GM and Chevy are replying to me on Twitter that they'd be happy to help. So I replied that I called them for help, and they don't call back. Ever. I hate this, "I look like I care in public" bullshit.
It works, though. Take advantage of it if there's a way it will help to get your car fixed.
I was just about to say what scrappy said. The part exists used, and someone will put it on for you.
Well I hope that there was no major damage.
Several pictures are askew!
Lawn furniture is down!
Books have gone atumble off to-be-read piles!