What are the impacts of a car that has been in a traffic accident?
2 Answers
The impacts of a car that has been in a traffic accident are as follows: 1. Various difficult problems: Vehicles that have been in major accidents usually leave traces on the frame, which are difficult to fully repair. At the same time, such vehicles also pose significant safety hazards because the repaired body structure and numerous data have changed, making them prone to various issues like tire wear, misalignment, and non-returning steering wheel during use, which are almost impossible to fully fix. 2. Endangering personal safety: The hazards of a fire-damaged accident vehicle. So-called fire-damaged accident vehicles generally include the following situations: first, the vehicle itself is prone to spontaneous combustion due to design defects. Second, improper modifications cause electrical fires. Third, deliberate damage to the vehicle by humans.
I had a personal experience where driving a repaired accident car brought endless troubles. The car had been rear-ended before, and while the surface repairs looked complete, I could feel the chassis was unstable when driving. The steering wheel always pulled to the right when turning, and the braking distance was noticeably longer, making me nervous on highways. The electronic system was even more annoying: the windows would malfunction randomly, and the dashboard warning lights flickered occasionally—later I found out it was due to hidden wiring damage from the collision. Safety-wise, it was worse: the airbags weren’t fully replaced, so they probably wouldn’t deploy in another crash. Financially, it was a bigger loss: when I tried to sell the car, buyers immediately slashed the price by half after checking the report, and my insurance renewal cost surged by 20%. Overall, accident cars are not only exhausting to drive but also come with long-term costs far exceeding expectations—I genuinely don’t recommend them.