Woman says a Toyota dealership test drove her Tahoe, then the engine mysteriously ‘failed’ — and they swooped in with a bargain-bin offer – We Got This Covered
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2009 Chevrolet Tahoe at the 2008 Los Angeles Auto Show, in Los Angeles.
Photo by Ted Soqui/Corbis via Getty Images

Woman says a Toyota dealership test drove her Tahoe, then the engine mysteriously ‘failed’ — and they swooped in with a bargain-bin offer

Was it tampered with?

A woman says a routine visit to a Toyota dealership to test drive a new 4Runner became an ordeal after the dealer briefly took her 2021 Chevy Tahoe for a trade-in appraisal, and after initially turning it down, claimed they’d take it after the engine was suddenly on the verge of failure.

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In a Reddit post, the woman wrote, “I took my 2021 Chevy Tahoe into a local Toyota dealership to look at a new 4Runner,” she wrote. “My friend was interested in buying my Tahoe,” she added, “I told them that,” but still, the dealership offered to give her a quote, “so I said yes.”

After she test drove the 4Runner, the car dealership staff asked if they could drive her Tahoe across the street to their used car lot to evaluate it. She agreed and waited inside. “He came back and said they were NOT interested in buying it because ‘the engine was making a weird knocking noise and the manager at the used lot thinks the engine is going to go out,’” she wrote.

The woman said the claim caught her completely off guard. Her Tahoe had roughly 105,000 miles and, according to her, had never shown signs of mechanical trouble. “I always [maintained] it on schedule and took great care of it. Never had any weird noises, never drove bad or rough, never had a code or light come on,” she wrote.

She left the dealership planning to sell the SUV to her friend instead. But when she tried to start the vehicle in the parking lot, everything changed.

From turned-down trade-in to engine failure

As the woman’s post then goes on to explain, “As I left I went to turn my car on and BOOM!!! Traction control service light, EMS service light on and the check engine light flashing at me. It was hard to start and shaking really bad.”

She immediately returned to the dealership to ask if anything had been connected to a diagnostic scanner or accidentally disturbed during the appraisal. The staff provided her with a loaner vehicle and instructed her to take the Tahoe to a nearby Chevy service department.

“All of the sudden the dealership is calling me saying ok we think it has engine failure and WILL buy your Tahoe from you because we can fix it for cheaper so I can buy new 4Runner,” she wrote. “Mind you they will offer 1/4 of what I need to pay it off.” The woman emphasized that, at that point, the Tahoe had not yet been formally diagnosed by a mechanic.

“I feel like I’m getting scammed?” she wrote. “I feel they might of messed with a coil or something for it to act up and low ball me to sell them my car?” The woman noted she had visited the dealership alone with her 3-year-old daughter and expressed frustration and confusion over the situation. “WTF is going on?! Anyone had a similar experience?” she asked.

It may be a matter of “bad timing”

Several Reddit commenters weighed in, with some urging caution and others suggesting the timing, while suspicious, could still be coincidental. “It could be bad timing. I have had check engine lights turn on while the mechanic has it,” one user wrote. “I know they did not mess anything up but more likely they see a lady who does not know about cars and they think they can get a deal because you have a ‘broken’ car but lucky you they are gonna do you a favor.” But another commenter found the dealership suspicious. “Especially since they don’t want it then AFTER it has a light on the dash they do? Very odd.”

Another user responded directly to the woman’s suspicion about possible tampering: “My thought exactly. Unplug a couple of coil packs and the engine runs like absolute crap without damaging it. If you don’t know what to look for to check this (or have a friend who can do it), have it taken to a mechanic very close by. Stop doing business with these people until you find out what happened to your Tahoe.”

Others advised her to avoid selling the SUV to the dealership under any circumstances until an independent mechanic could inspect it. Whether the incident was an unfortunate coincidence or something more troubling, commenters overwhelmingly agreed on one point: get an independent diagnosis before making any decisions about the vehicle.


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William Kennedy
William Kennedy is a full-time freelance content writer and journalist in Eugene, OR. William covered true crime, among other topics for Grunge.com. He also writes about live music for the Eugene Weekly, where his beat also includes arts and culture, food, and current events. He lives with his wife, daughter, and two cats who all politely accommodate his obsession with Doctor Who and The New Yorker.