Start with AutoTrader.com. They have listings for different types of vehicles, as well as owner reviews of their vehicles. CARFAX Vehicle History is another option for information on used pickup trucks.
Very literally, hot wire is a wire that is hot. Pertaining to vehicles, to hot wire a vehicle is to start the engine or motor of the vehicles without the use of the ignition.
No, vehicles should be able to start after a airbag is deployed. The accident itself could have made the vehicle unstartable.
They could never start moving - their wheels would keep spinning while the vehicle remained stationary.
Each vehicle is a little different, but you probably have one to two gallons left in the tank. If you know the vehicles mpg you can figure it out. If your vehicle gets 15 mpg you have between 15 and thirty miles before you start walking.
Any vehicle in which the engine spins (cranks) but won't fire has an electrical problem with the ignition system (but not the starter) or a fuel problem. There are a number of good answers to the underlying cause of a "no start" on different vehicles in another part of WikiAnswers. And you got links....
my service is a long awaited help for these vehicle owners who have frozen batteries and cold engines on cold winter mornings.
There is no such number. You can start with a different number and end with different ones.
It is a feature in some vehicles, and installable in most where the vehicle can be started from the FOB without a driver present in the vehicle. The only reason I can think of for having one is to warm up a vehicle in cold climates so it is all warmed up before you get into it.
You start the vehicle, when the computer sees that the vehicles started like someone is going to drive it, its a drive cycle
Autos.com and Cars.com are great places to start gathering information about vehicles. Consumer Reports is good for comparing different vehicles and their features.
Yes, although it may not start well since carbuated vehicles need to have the choke "set" before starting the engine in the cold. To set the choke, a carburated vehicle needs the accellerator pedal pressed down once. That is not required for injected vehicles.