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Reply to "~ Old Car Question Here ~"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]At 25, a car becomes a "classic." By default. But a '99 car is considered OLD. And a brand new radiator = the car should never overheat and smoke. Your mechanic did a crappy job. No matter how "old" a vehicle is, if the radiator is new the vehicle should never overheat. If it does, blame the shop that put in the radiator and the company that manufactured the vehicle.[/quote] You don't know much about cars, do you? The white stuff coming out of a radiator isn't "smoke". Stick to posting about things you actually know about and leave this to people who understand such things. And there is no officially recognized designation of "classic", and certainly not 25 years. Some states allow "historic" tags at 20-25 years, depending on the state, but that's largely an emissions classification, and means nothing otherwise. A 20 year old car can still be repaired with off the shelf parts. A truly "old" car uses parts typically only available from special suppliers. [/quote]
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