Thailand

RTW Trip

Trading

Smashed my PT Cruiser with a Tank

We all make mistakes.  In 2003, I purchased a PT Cruiser.  It is completely reasonable for you to ask: “John, you don’t look mentally ill… why would you do this?!”.  The best case I can come up with is that I wanted a stick shift (pop quiz, hotshot, how many Lamborghini’s today are made stick?  Zero), I wanted something a little “different”, and I wanted it not to suck gas (remember this is in 2003, when average MPG was going down for the first time in 20 years).  But seriously, I have no defense.  The only thing working in my favor is that I corrected the mistake… a decade later.  I’m a slow learner.

pt-cruiser-natural-state
The PT Cruiser in its’ natural state: with tires deflated.

The PT Cruiser is a Moving Pile of Garbage

No one know the issues with this car better than I.  Here is the list of what I had to put up with since buying it:

  • Tire deflation – the tires wouldn’t hold to the rims due to the type of metal, so they kept deflating.  Eventually, I had an air compressor that I plugged into the car to blow up the tires before going anywhere.  Before I got that air compressor, the tires would all be of a different pressure and the car would be quite skittish (the back end would “swim” down the highway, or strongly pull to one side).  Sometimes the tires would just pop because they were never at the pressure they were designed for.
  • No air conditioning – The compressor went out around 30K miles, and ever since I’ve spent the summer months sweating away.
  • Electrical problems – The engineers knew that they underside of the car would be vulnerable to the salt us northerners have to put on the roads in the winter.  I knew they were planning for this because they encased some things in rubber.  What they didn’t put in rubber: the connection from the battery to the alternator.  So the car would randomly die because the battery wasn’t getting charged.
  • Spare tire cage noise – The spare tire housing underneath the car was also housed in rubber, but the bolt holding it on was not rust-proof.  It snapped like a twig one day around 50K miles when I needed the spare, and the cage rattled around for another 50K miles until the good guys at Midas offered to just take the useless thing off for me.  Why didn’t I get it fixed?  Chrysler wouldn’t sell me the $10 bolt I needed.  They wanted $350 to replace the entire case (plus labor, of course).
  • Road noise – Talking on the phone while in the PT was impossible as the cabin noise was ungodly.
  • Wouldn’t start in sub-zero weather without a jump – This is a mild problem because I live in Minnesota.  The car was nearly unusable for several months out of the year, right from the start.  Yes I had synthetic oil.
  • Cost – I spent roughly $10K in maintenance from the time I bought the car until its’ demise at 107K miles.  The car had 8 sets of tires because they kept popping and going flat.  Now you can see why I didn’t just get the AC fixed: I wasn’t really optimistic the problem would stay fixed.
engine-light-pt
Both the engine and oil light have been on since 10K miles. I think they mean: Yes, you have an engine and oil. Thanks PT!

I’ve been stranded a dozen times by this car, and I wanted nothing more in the world than to send it to hell.  The most memorable time I’ve been screwed by the PT was driving back from the family cabin, a 4 hour drive from northern Wisconsin to west Minneapolis.  It was a Sunday, July 4th, and the tire blew out when I was miles from nowhere.  To make matters worse, I somehow manage to lock myself out of the car.  When it rains, it pours.  Or in this case, I’m sweating balls as I trek for miles to the nearest town.  I find a guy hanging around a marina who is a “locksmith”, which basically means he has a hangar he can bend in funny ways.  To his credit, my amazement, and another knock against Chryslers’ ability to provide theft-proof machines, he’s able to get the door open with his “tools”.  I give him $50 and he’s overjoyed.  Hey man, without you I’d still be trekking across the land of beer and cheese.

Essential Tools for Owning a PT Cruiser

  • Air compressor (that plugs into the car) – The tires will go flat, constantly.  Keeping the pressure roughly correct reduces blowouts.
  • Jumper Cables – The electrical system is trash, and the battery is strained from pumping up the tires.  Or maybe it’s just too cold and the car refuses to start.  There’s a ton of reasons you need these.
  • Spare Tire – I’ve put more than 1K miles on my spare tire, when they are supposed to be used for less than 100 miles.  Very little tread left by the time I destroyed the PT.

essential-tools-pt-cruiser

The Embarrassment of Owning a PT Cruiser

Actual quote from my wife while we were dating:

Let’s take my car.  I’d like to find you sexually attractive.

Her car was a Jetta (also stick shift).  Yes, my car was less manly than a Jetta, the quintessential aught’s girl conveyance.  We’ve been married for 5 years and together for 7, and she’s been in that car less than 10 times.  She wasn’t even in it when we drove it down to destroy it.  And she wasn’t the first woman to suggest driving her car, either.
Over the years, I’ve been laughed at while driving the car.  Literally, a car of women next to me at a stoplight would start laughing hysterically and pointing at me, just like in a movie.  I had a woman who was interested in me do a double-take upon seeing the car and had a very pointed question: “Are you gay?”.  Again, I have no defense.

Fast Forward to the Solution

I enjoyed a game at the time called World of Tanks, and did a Google search on if I could drive an actual real life WWII tank.  Turns out that there was a place just an hour south of me that did just that!  Plus, they had a package where you could smash cars with a tank.  What if I supplied the car?  Would that be possible?  Turns out that it was possible!
Before we continue, I did have a good experience sending this car to hell.  However, if you think that I’m pimping the place I did it with, let me tell you that they are woefully incompetent.  I spent 3 months emailing and on the phone with them, and each and every time I talked to someone new who had no clue what it was I wanted.  Even the day I showed up to deliver the car so they could prepare it for smashing, the guy I left the car with had no idea what was going on.
The day before we were going to smash it, they told me other legal things they needed that they couldn’t remember to tell me in the previous 3 months of emails and phone calls.  Seriously, they are morons and it’s miraculous that this thing got done.  Correction, they are morons with heavy weaponry.  Severely terrifying.  If you are going to do an event with them, use small words, write in crayon, and confirm everything 10 times over.
As part of the package, I got to drive other tanks as well and even shoot a couple of guns.  It’s a real redneck operation they have here.  And I mean that in a good way.

john-shooting-m4
Shooting a fully automatic M4. God bless America.

Driving Other Tanks

First we spend an hour listening to the tank company complain about how people come into their operation and claim they know everything about tanks because they’ve played Battlefield 1942 or World of Tanks.  Seriously, I agree with these guys: how they hell people claim they know about WWII equipment from video games is mind-boggling, and I enjoy every second of their griping.  It gets me a lot less upset over their incompetence to know they have to suffer armchair generals every day.
FV433 Abbott SPG
I am driving three vehicles today:

  • FV433 Abbott SPG (above)
  • FV432 APC (below)
  • Chieftain for the car crush

FV 432 APC
These are all British vehicles.  Why no American tanks?  Because the US chooses not to sell their military equipment to other countries/civilians.  It’s incredibly hard to get parts for American equipment because it’s so rare.  For example, to drive an M4 Sherman for 10 minutes will run you $3,500!  Tanks were actually meant to be disposable.  The average lifespan of a tank in combat in WWII was 42 minutes.  They were never meant to travel more than 400 miles in their life, and the odometer on some of these tanks is over 1,000 miles.  Just keeping them running is a big expense.
IT’S NOT ABOUT THE MONEY, IT’S ABOUT SENDING A MESSAGE
But I can’t really complain about how much it costs.  The tank package along with destroying a “working” vehicle will total more than a few thousand dollars out of my pocket.  Why didn’t I donate the car instead?  Simple: it’s garbage and on the verge of collapse.  It would take a few thousand dollars just to keep running.  I drove it once a week and my wife would make sure she was awake until I got home in case it stranded me yet again.  If I donated it, there’s a large chance they would have just sold it for scrap.  Might as well junk it myself.  It was a great catharsis.
This is actually one of the things that I didn’t expect: no one really understands why I did it.  Sure, some kids at the tank place [immediately upon seeing the PT sitting outside] exclaimed: “I want to crush the PT Cruiser with a tank!”.  So, I mean, the kids understood.  Everyone over the age of 12 seems to give me a confused look when I show them this.  The truth is that I just wanted to do something fun and unique.  It’s been a great story to tell and I’ve never once regretted doing it.

What’s it like to drive a tank?

First, these vehicles were made with a shorter person in mind.  All of them expect a 5’8″ guy rather than someone over 6 foot.  So everything is a bit cramped.  I can’t imagine sitting in one for hours on end.  Second, they are HOT and LOUD.  You’re sitting right next to the engine.  It’s kind of like riding a motorcycle, where it’s possible to touch your leg on a piece of metal that will burn you.
Driving a tank is just like driving a forklift/skid-loader.  There are two levers: pushing the left one forward will turn the tank to the right, pushing the right one forward turns to the left, pushing both forward makes the tank go forward, etc.  All of the tanks are pretty responsive in their controls.

APC-driver-viewport
This is how you’d drive in combat. There’s 15 tons of tank on your left, it’s a million degrees in there, and you have to drive 30 MPH over rugged terrain while bouncing like ball and looking through a tiny window. Good luck with that!

The visibility while driving “buttoned-up” is terrible.  There’s no peripheral vision and the driver is sitting off to one side of the tank, so much of it is educated guesswork.  The tank bounces up and down like a spastic child, and “comfort” is just not a word that comes to mind while driving any of these things.

The Main Event

Driving a tank is fun, but destroying a soul-killing, money-draining, cock-blocking conveyance is the real goal of this day.
Our tool for this task is the British-made Chieftain.  Clocking in at 62 tons, 35 feet long, and 12 feet wide, it seems capable for this job.  The tank is a decade newer than the previous versions I’ve driven, but the inside feels exactly the same.  It drives the same as well.
My instructions on how to do this are clear, and take all of a few seconds to be explained to me:

  • Don’t turn at all – the tank and car are perfectly lined up as-is.  Just go forward.
  • Don’t stop on the way up
  • Pause on the way down when told for photos

It might seem less than exciting after driving tanks off-road that there isn’t much interaction with the machine.  However, there are good reasons why they do it this way that will become clear shortly.

forklift-pt-setup
Delivering the PT to where it’ll meet its’ maker…

You may have figured it out already, but in case you haven’t: I’m not good with money.  What’s even more ridiculous than smashing a car with a tank?  Filming it from the air with a drone!
drove-above-tank
My brother-in-law Kelvin is at the controls of the drone.  If we were thinking, we’d have handed off our phones to someone to get the side-view footage as well.  Hey, back off!  This was my first time doing this!
tank-driving-over-car
Take a look at the GIF to to see it in action (video coming soon, promise).  Also in the video is another car crush with both the aerial and side views.
What was it like in the tank?  It seems stupid to say, but wasn’t completely obvious to me beforehand, but a 60 ton war machine doesn’t really give a fuck that the PT Cruiser is in the way.  While the tank pitches up a bit in the video, it was actually really hard to tell when I had actually driven over it.  Couldn’t feel a thing.

The Aftermath

What happened next was very fitting for a car that would never work properly yet refused to outright die: it was caught in the treads of the tank and took 15 minutes for a forklift to pry it off.
forklift-prying-carcass
This happened with the other car as well, and is the reason why there are very strict driving instructions.  Traveling on rough terrain is one thing, and going over metal that wraps around into the tracks is a very different problem.  Eventually they manage to get the ugly carcass of the fail-machine off of the tank.
After the crush and random pictures of the wreckage, we’re pretty wiped out.  It has been a long and hot day.  The ride home in my wife’s BMW x5 is everything the PT was not: quiet, smooth, cool, and comfortable.  And the best part is that no one laughed at me or made judgments on my sexuality on the ride home.  Not owning a PT Cruiser is great.

cheesy-photo-aftermath
Typical cheesy photo-op material. Eh, why not.

rest-in-pieces
John’s PT Cruiser: 2003 – 2014. Rest in pieces.
Follow:

4 Comments

  1. Alex
    February 25, 2015 / 3:23 pm

    Excellent

  2. Kathy
    September 12, 2016 / 1:49 pm

    I have a PT Cruiser, same color, older, and it’s been great, has had none of those problems. I think you got a lemon, so good on you for smashing it.

  3. Jose Espinoza
    January 23, 2017 / 12:27 am

    Lmfao, crazy ass white boy, I laughed at your story telling more then wanting to see that pt trampled,
    It was a long story , but , like a long trip, if your enjoying it, it was well worth it.
    Very interesting all the way thru, but , I’m pissed at your crazy ass too, why? Cause there’s no part #2, WTF? Now I feel like I watched a good movie that end to quick , I read a lot, and have never , ever , complicated anyone on there life changing events ,
    One last thing , when are you, hold on got to say this , ( NOW DONT GO LETTING THIS GO TO YOUR HEAD LOL) OK, Moving on, last thing , when is your crazy ass going write a book about this ? If you do , and your wife thinks its not a bad idea and you pursue the idea, Remember me on the dedicated page and email me a copy ,
    Right here: joseesp88@gmail.com
    Do you mind if I share this ?

  4. JUlie
    December 21, 2017 / 11:24 am

    I own a PT cruiser. You are so right on! I hate this car like I hate hell. What the f was I thinking? Great read!

Leave a Reply to JUlie Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *