Vehicles — System Brief

Your vehicle is the home system with the highest concentration of life-safety tripwires. Six components span a spectrum from administrative (insurance lapsing overnight) to mechanical (timing belt snapping without warning) to cumulative-silent (oil sludge, tire aging). The single most important thing to get right across the whole system: follow the manufacturer’s schedule by km AND time, and act on sensory warning signs the same day they appear — most catastrophic vehicle failures are preventable, but only if you don’t defer.


The rules that matter most (system-wide tripwires)

  • Grinding brakes → stop driving and call a mechanic the same day. Metal-on-metal contact; every km adds rotor damage. Not a “book it next week” situation. → vehicle-brakes (Home Systems)
  • Soft or sinking brake pedal → do not drive. Hydraulic failure — the brakes may work one moment and fail the next. → vehicle-brakes (Home Systems)
  • Timing belt at or past manufacturer interval (km OR years) → replace proactively. On an interference engine, a snapped belt is an instant engine-destruction event with no warning. → vehicle-scheduled-service (Home Systems)
  • ICBC policy expiry date passes without renewal → you are uninsured. No grace period. One day of driving on an expired policy is driving without insurance, with full personal liability for any crash. → vehicle-registration-insurance (Home Systems)
  • Oil warning light (red) comes on → pull over immediately. Low oil pressure; driving further risks seizing the engine. → vehicle-oil-fluids (Home Systems)
  • Tires fail the toonie test (silver outer ring visible) → replace before the next wet season. At 1.6 mm you are at the legal floor and well past the safety margin for Metro Vancouver rain. → vehicle-tires (Home Systems)
  • Tires are 6 years old regardless of remaining tread → plan replacement. Rubber ages silently; a failed highway tire is not recoverable. → vehicle-tires (Home Systems)
  • BC winter-tire routes (Coquihala, Sea-to-Sky, most Interior highways) Oct 1 – Apr 30 → must have M+S or 3PMSF tires or you can be turned back and fined $121.vehicle-tires (Home Systems)
  • Battery 4–5 years old with any symptom (slow crank, corrosion, warning light) → replace proactively. Batteries don’t announce their last start. → vehicle-battery (Home Systems)
  • Start-stop vehicle needs AGM battery. Installing a conventional flooded battery in a start-stop car shortens both the battery and the charging system. → vehicle-battery (Home Systems)
  • **Basic ICBC TPL at 1–5M costs relatively little. → vehicle-registration-insurance (Home Systems)

Component-by-component

ComponentThe one thing to watchOwner vs pro
vehicle-oil-fluids (Home Systems)Follow the oil life monitor (change at ~15%) + never ignore a puddle under the car; a slow undetected oil leak leads to engine seizure, not a repair bill — an engine billOwner: monthly dipstick check, seasonal fluid check; Pro: oil changes, brake/coolant/transmission flushes
vehicle-tires (Home Systems)Tread depth AND tire age are both safety limits — worn tread causes hydroplaning on Metro Vancouver wet roads; aged rubber fails at speed without tread warningOwner: monthly pressure check, toonie test, DOT age check; Pro: mount/balance, rotation, alignment
vehicle-brakes (Home Systems)Squeal = warning (service within 1–2 weeks); grind = stop driving now; soft pedal = do not drive. All brake hydraulic work is pro-onlyOwner: weekly auditory check, monthly fluid level/colour; Pro: all mechanical and hydraulic work
vehicle-battery (Home Systems)Short city-only trips cause sulfation and early death; get a free load test every 2–3 years after age 3; European vehicles need battery registration after any swapOwner: terminal corrosion check every 6 months; Pro: load test, installation with registration if needed
vehicle-scheduled-service (Home Systems)Two clocks run simultaneously (km AND calendar); keeping every service invoice is your warranty evidence and resale leverage; the timing belt is the one item that destroys an engine if missedOwner: air filter swaps; Pro: everything else on the schedule; budget ~1,800/year in Metro Vancouver
vehicle-registration-insurance (Home Systems)ICBC Autoplan does not auto-renew; a missed renewal date = immediate uninsured exposure with no grace period; optional coverage can be bought from private insurers at 20–40% lessOwner task: mark expiry date in calendar; renew at an Autoplan broker annually; shop optional coverage at each renewal

Recurring upkeep at a glance

Cross-reference → Maintenance Calendar (Home Systems)

  • Monthly: oil dipstick check (level + colour on rag); tire pressure check (cold tires, door-jamb placard value).
  • Every 6 months: all fluid levels under the hood (coolant, brake, power steering, washer); battery terminal visual; swap windshield washer fluid seasonally.
  • Every 8,000–12,000 km or when oil life monitor hits ~15%: oil and filter change; tire rotation.
  • Every 10,000–15,000 km: brake pad inspection (can coincide with tire rotation).
  • Every 20,000–25,000 km: wheel alignment check (or if car pulls / shows uneven tire wear).
  • Annually (by late September): book winter tire swap appointment — fills fast in Metro Vancouver.
  • Every 2 years: brake fluid flush (DOT 3); battery load test after age 3.
  • Every 2–3 years: brake fluid flush (DOT 4); transmission fluid check.
  • Every 5 years / ~100,000–160,000 km: coolant flush (confirm type in owner’s manual).
  • Every 60,000–100,000 km: transmission fluid drain-and-fill.
  • Every 100,000–150,000 km (or per manufacturer schedule): timing belt, water pump, tensioners, spark plugs — the major interval service.
  • Annually: ICBC Autoplan renewal — mark the expiry date independently of the ICBC reminder letter.

Biggest-cost / irreversible decisions

These are the decisions that surface The Decision Lifecycle framing or hit finance-replacement-reserves (Home Systems).

  • Engine replacement from oil neglect or timing belt failure15,000+; the result of deferring cheap scheduled maintenance. Irreversible and high-cost. The prevention is scheduled oil changes and proactive timing belt replacement.
  • Major interval service (~90,000–100,000 km): timing belt + water pump + tensioners + spark plugs + coolant + brake fluid together — 3,000 at a Metro Vancouver independent shop. Plan and budget for it; it clusters costs but is cheaper than the failures it prevents.
  • New tire set: ~2,000 installed depending on type and size. Crosses the $500 threshold; earns a Decision Lifecycle comparison — but the math is almost always “replace promptly” once tread drops below 3 mm or age exceeds 6–10 years.
  • **At-fault crash with only basic TPL (1–5M is the cost-effective prevention; do it at the next renewal.
  • Repair vs retire on an aging vehicle: when a repair quote on a high-mileage vehicle approaches or exceeds the vehicle’s resale value, the decision becomes irreversible and high-stakes — use the full Decision Lifecycle.

Strata vs detached

All six vehicle components are universal — they apply regardless of whether you live in a strata or detached home. The vehicle itself is personal property; strata bylaws do not govern your maintenance schedule or insurance.

The only strata-adjacent considerations:

  • Strata parkade oil spills are your responsibility to clean. If your vehicle has a leak that drips on common-property flooring, you bear the cleanup and potential bylaw liability. Use absorbent pads, not water flushing. Report large leaks to building management.
  • Parkade ceiling height may constrain tire profile choices if you run larger-size tires on an SUV or truck.
  • Tire storage in a strata unit — if space is constrained and you run two sets of tires seasonally, you may need a paid tire storage facility rather than in-unit storage.
  • Insurance overlap: ICBC Autoplan covers the vehicle in motion; strata insurance covers the building and common property. The vehicle’s own comprehensive coverage is the relevant policy for theft or damage in a parkade.

What this brief is NOT

This is a rollup, not a substitute for the component notes. Each note in Vehicles (Home Systems) carries the full mechanism explanation, failure-mode discrimination tables, step-by-step owner procedures, triangulated Metro Vancouver pricing (DIY / Basic / Standard / Premium tiers), questions to ask a technician, and sources. When a tripwire fires or a decision comes up, open the component note — this brief tells you which one and why. For the vault-wide index, see Home Systems KB MOC.