A canadian tire customer in newfoundland and labrador says a routine oil change led to a highway emergency, after staff replaced bolts with plastic zip ties to hold a key part of his car together. Travis jones says what should have been a routine oil change at canadian tire turned into a. A newfoundland driver says canadian tire used zip ties instead of bolts during a repair
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Experts call it unsafe and demand better standards.
There’s a story making the rounds now about a man who took his 2017 honda civic into a canadian tire in the newfoundland and labrador province of canada for an oil change, and while being serviced, canadian tire techs secured his damaged splash shield in place using zip ties.
In the realm of automotive repairs, few issues spark as much debate as the efficacy of temporary fixes A recent incident involving a canadian tire customer, travis jones, has reignited discussions about the use of zip ties for car repairs, particularly concerning underbody splash shields Plastic zip ties instead of metal bolts vehicle model 2017 honda civic location of incident
Clarenville, newfoundland and labrador company’s response and customer safety canadian tire’s head office stated that each location is independently operated and based its response on local information They suggested that missing bolts could occur during routine maintenance Company doesn't answer questions about use of zip ties, but says it offered to pay for repairs