High-tech car gadgets are cool, until they
need repair
| | By
Terry Jackson Bankrate.com |
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Sure, all those high-tech gadgets and systems on your
new car are cool. But have you ever stopped to figure out what they'll
cost you if and when they go kaput?
Lock
your seat belts! Let's say your luxury sedan
has been in a fender bender. You sharply smacked the car in front of you when
the light suddenly changed to red. The bumper is now a twisted
plastic noodle, the front of the hood looks like an accordion and a couple of
air bags in the dash and steering wheel deployed. It will be
a pain in your daily schedule to get the car fixed, but no one was hurt, so how
bad can it be? You roughly estimate $3,000 to $5,000. Then
you get the repair estimate: $15,000 and your heart skips a beat at the thought
of increased insurance premiums or the possibility your car could be written off
as totaled.
As cars have incorporated more high-tech safety and
convenience features -- some optional, some standard equipment --
the cost of repairing them in the case of even minor accidents or
just plain malfunction has risen dramatically.
"There are some really great features being incorporated
into more and more cars, but the cost of repairing or replacing
these systems is a lot more than many owners realize," says Russ
Rader, spokesman for the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety,
which tracks such trends.
New car features, big repair
bills
What
worries some consumer advocates is the likelihood that most car buyers these days
are unaware of the potentially huge repair costs associated with the tide of new
features that have been incorporated in cars and trucks over the last five years. A
hypothetical front-end collision in a 2006 Mercedes-Benz sedan could -- in addition
to the body damage -- destroy the adaptive cruise control, which uses radar units
mounted in the front bumper to keep track of traffic around the car. The cost
to repair: $3,342. If your optional Xenon headlights and their washer system are
also damaged, add on $1,644 per light -- or almost $6,700 over and above the cost
of the body damage.
If you own a sport utility vehicle like the Cadillac
Escalade, take care of those big, heated, outside rearview mirrors.
Knock one off in a parking garage and it will cost $604 to replace.
One of the coolest gadgets that came out recently
is the rain-sensor windshield wiper system that actually turns on
your wipers when needed. But, if a falling tree branch shatters
your windshield and also knocks out this system, expect to shell
out $500 beyond the cost of the glass to get the rain-sensor system
replaced.
Another big-ticket item: those backup cameras that
are starting to appear on everything from luxury sedans to SUVs
to minivans. They're great safety items that eliminate dangerous
blind spots, but if a parking lot smack down demolishes the one
on your Lexus RX330, it will cost $4,336 to replace.
What's more, it can be very difficult for car shoppers
who try to consider the cost of repair for all those conveniences
and options to get a firm handle on the potential financial risk.
Consider the hot new feature on the 2007 Lexus LS 460 sedan, automatic
parallel parking, which calculates the size of an open parking space
and, using sensors in the bumpers, actually parallel parks your
car -- hands off the wheel, but foot on the brake.
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