Lyndon residents often describe failure scenarios that show up during daily driving—not just “at the worst time possible,” but at predictable moments where safety depends on critical systems.
Common patterns include:
- Brake and stability problems after warning signs appeared (or after a shop replaced a related component and symptoms returned)
- Steering or traction issues that feel intermittent—especially on wet roads and during commute traffic
- Electrical malfunctions that affect sensors, lighting, or control systems
- Airbag/occupant safety concerns after deployment issues or warning indicators
- Overheating or power loss that leads to loss of control or the need to pull into traffic
- Component failures after repairs where documentation is incomplete or the failed part is discarded
In these cases, the key question isn’t “who’s the worst driver.” It’s whether a defect in a vehicle component made the vehicle unsafe in a way that contributed to the crash or damage.


