Skye
Well-Known Member
@H3LLZYEA Take it to the closest dealer. I'd actually be somewhat vague, so they don't come to any pre-conceived notions about anything that might be wrong or history. Ask them to perform a full mechanical and electrical diagnostic on the car. Something they'd do when prepping a car for sale. Scans, checks, software code updates, recall notices, etc. Use that as a baseline. Then, continue to monitor. Just for the heck of it, leave the car in neutral, but with the parking brake set, in-case it happens again. And something less than a full compliment of gas.
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