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Scraping a driveway--does it deserve a warning letter?
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<blockquote data-quote="FracusBrown" data-source="post: 771946" data-attributes="member: 29360"><p>I have done the same thing in my own truck. I guess I should expect Ford to take the blame. </p><p> </p><p>Every package car, passenger car, truck and every other type of vehicle has a clearance limit. Some lower than others. </p><p> </p><p>The driveway is fixed. The clearance is fixed. The drivers actions are the variable. </p><p> </p><p>I feel your pain, but in this case, nothing makes better sense than not backing into an upward sloping driveway in a truck with limited rear clearance.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="FracusBrown, post: 771946, member: 29360"] I have done the same thing in my own truck. I guess I should expect Ford to take the blame. Every package car, passenger car, truck and every other type of vehicle has a clearance limit. Some lower than others. The driveway is fixed. The clearance is fixed. The drivers actions are the variable. I feel your pain, but in this case, nothing makes better sense than not backing into an upward sloping driveway in a truck with limited rear clearance. [/QUOTE]
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Scraping a driveway--does it deserve a warning letter?
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