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General Motors Cars Record Highest, Lowest Death Rates
National News April 20, 2007
General Motors Corp. vehicles had the highest and lowest driver death rates from 2002 through 2005, according to a study being released Thursday by the insurance industry.
Two-door, two-wheel ...
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| Subject | Posted By | Posted On |
|---|---|---|
| The only thing about "reason's" comment | Jewel | Apr 23, 2007, 2:32 pm |
| RE: RE: RE: reason | no pun intended | Apr 23, 2007, 2:28 pm |
| RE: RE: reason | dot_hemath | Apr 23, 2007, 1:01 pm |
| RE: reason | no pun intented | Apr 23, 2007, 9:30 am |
| reason | Because | Apr 20, 2007, 4:26 pm |
| Isn't the news story that.... | Gill Fin | Apr 20, 2007, 4:20 pm |
| RE: Ford | reason | Apr 20, 2007, 2:24 pm |
| Ford | RHigh | Apr 20, 2007, 1:19 pm |
| Back to article | ||



Subject: reason
By the way, you are partially correct about the 2002 Explorer design change. Firestone/Bridgestone had a big roll (no pun intended) in correcting the stability of, not only the Explorer, but other SUV's that had similar killing problems. Explorers rolled over more often than other SUV's in tire-tread accidents, and had vibration and suspension problems that Ford couldn't always explain and sometimes couldn't fix. Ford's 2002 new "porthole frame" took care of the vibration problem and Firestone took care of the 15" ATX and ATXII tires.
Back to the point… I can't wait for your thesis style reply; it's just a delete click away for me.