richardycc
Diamond Member
- Apr 29, 2001
- 5,719
- 1
- 81
Salt is in the ocean, not on my cars!For those that park the car in the garage all the time do you find it rusts faster? I've been told that even with an unheated garage the residual heat from the engine will warm it up enough for the salt to activate and start to eat through faster than if you leave it outside. It kind of makes sense.
It's called many people apparently live it the sticks. Here in LA most every home in suburbia has a 2-car garage...unless it's been converted to living space. However, you'd be hard pressed to fit two cars AND a ton of junk. Heck, I can't even fit two cars and my yard equipment and I don't have a rider.damn lots of large homes among the AT crowd. Must be nice not to live on top of your neighbors. Even here in suburbia, I think there's only 15ft that separates us and we have 2700sqft. Even a 2-car garage is rare.
Salt is in the ocean, not on my cars!
Interesting theory though.
I can't believe this went 22 replies without someone saying:
"no, but my trunk is"
so I'll just go ahead and do it.
For those that park the car in the garage all the time do you find it rusts faster? I've been told that even with an unheated garage the residual heat from the engine will warm it up enough for the salt to activate and start to eat through faster than if you leave it outside. It kind of makes sense.
2 car garage with lots of stuff in it but there are two cars parked in it too. Told my wife when we bought the place, I was going to park in the garage. She can park wherever she wants but I'm in the garage. My garage is for parking cars first and storing stuff second.
Apparently a lot of people's garages are used for storage rather than cars. I miss having a garage for the days when it snows and rains. We have a full size attic and basement so plenty of storage and we actually throw stuff out.
3.5 car garage with 2 cars and some random stuff in there. HOA doesnt allow street or driveway parking so the subdivison tends to have large garages.
Sure they can. If the city didn't build the streets the HOA is free to restrict overnight parking. I'd say 95% of the time the developer builds streets in new developments...at least in SoCal.
No driveway parking is a bit extreme though.
There's plenty of communities here where HOA is over $500 a month....and it doesn't snow here.The developers here generally build them as a proffer and then turn them over to the state. If they didn't do that then the HOA dues would be much higher to cover the snow removal and maintenance costs.
For those that park the car in the garage all the time do you find it rusts faster? I've been told that even with an unheated garage the residual heat from the engine will warm it up enough for the salt to activate and start to eat through faster than if you leave it outside. It kind of makes sense.
Bah, park them outside, wipe off a spot on the windshield to see through, and all the snow will blow off by the time you get to work.I've heard that before as well but fuck parking it outside where its cold as hell and I have to clean off a foot of snow and scrape the windshield every morning.
The developers here generally build them as a proffer and then turn them over to the state. If they didn't do that then the HOA dues would be much higher to cover the snow removal and maintenance costs.
Bah, park them outside, wipe off a spot on the windshield to see through, and all the snow will blow off by the time you get to work.![]()
