Why A Bomb Squad Was Called On A Car Owner Who Was Just Afraid Of Door-Dings

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This is one of those questions that comes up periodically in philosophy classes, usually as an example of a sort of paradoxical thought experiment that has no known answer: Could a driver’s intense fear of getting their doors dinged actually cause multiple businesses and buildings to be evacuated? Well, I’m excited to say that thanks to a little thing we call “reality,” this question now has an answer, because this situation actually happened in Murfreesboro, Tennessee, when a person’s home-made door protectors on their 2012-ish Lexus IS caused enough alarm that an entire block of the city was closed off for almost two hours, schools in the nearby area were put on lockdown, and people were evacuated from restaurants and businesses. All because some dude didn’t want his Lexus dinged.

Even better, the owner of the car was actually one of the people standing around after a the restaurant he was eating in was evacuated, watching all of the police activity in the area around where he parked his car across the street. It wasn’t until the cops ran the license plate and called the owner on the phone that the owner realized it was him and his strangely bomb-looking DIY door protectors that were causing all of the ruckus.

Here’s the post about the lockdown – and its later resolution – from the Murfreesboro Police Department:

https://www.facebook.com/MboroPoliceDept/posts/pfbid0AXdQMk9cpR9cvGPnmJUXLA4DgnphGRiUc67GHEzPYpc5SiioDAB8zP1hVV992Jkql?__cft__[0]=AZVEtdUXVhKpEeCf0YdRQYMheFLWznZ7AaB-eSd1CKi6wP1MEu40KPW8EB9j72h2lLVlQ3udoKnwVEGHfdVXHrLa2HiBvP5R1UG4768DC-l7Y1mm2BiB5hhmy61-jZw4Ig30unQDmX_Le6r2-dah-o6pD8LNmh1Ro6JeI7ciQeg_UsoNopErOsHXyw24xJr-uFQ0YVmbX1_bex5gBKoL0OyL&__tn__=%2CO%2CP-R

… and the follow up:

https://www.facebook.com/MboroPoliceDept/posts/pfbid0PSvFnFPLMz7AtKftmCRQrzU6aTHFMe85Nek8ZXFNdKFcxxVJgwsvSd9TdxGAPsEGl?__cft__[0]=AZVr8ypb5a-2PDk_PlfUPWlm2JEzIrYS6r7dchY-ZUoohzFsLvF-lHdNuzyIb9ZZ_lA4ffufbyP8s4LixBQ6gca-moniQXjkcFG17EJVqZfl2FYnoQUv_E9SdzCKmvGnn_T3kvJR4pcVtcs1x88UEZOLdTUD3JFwUUBF1T6rexK21OkqRsWEFGevoH0aKMD_OKWAD4jM33QIy43ARpLvzPeN&__tn__=%2CO%2CP-R

To be fair, those dent protectors do look weirdly bomb-like, especially with those wires between them. I don’t think you could open the passenger side doors with those things on there? They really resemble some sort of explosives packed into sheets and wired to blow the whole side off that car.

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Of course, the very existence of these handcrafted door protectors raises so many more questions. Questions like, why? How many times has this guy had his doors dinged? And that seems kind of a high location for where doors usually ding? And why did he park the side with the door-ding guards in an end spot where they can’t possibly do any good, since there’s no car next to it there?

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And then of course is the bigger question: does this look better than having a few little door dings? How are they stuck on there? Magnets? Glue? JB Weld? Are the wires there so he can carry them around, nunchuck-style, when not in use? Does this person really prefer the look of driving around with a pair of mummified salamis to just risking some dents?

[Editor’s Note: I’ve never seen someone who could benefit more from owning a Citroen C4 Cactus:

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It’s a glorious machine. I’ve driven one. -DT]. 

Anyway, everything was resolved and no one was hurt, just inconvenienced because of someone’s strange, confusing, and let’s be honest here, pretty needless, attempt to avoid a few tiny little scratches or dents. This has to be the largest recorded inconveniencing of un-related people by an attempt to avoid door dings in history.

I hope if this guy decides to keep using these things, he at least Sharpies NOT A BOMB onto each of the thingies to keep everyone nice and calm.

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68 thoughts on “Why A Bomb Squad Was Called On A Car Owner Who Was Just Afraid Of Door-Dings

  1. I understand caring for the vehicle but if these are magnetic it doesn’t matter the material used as a cushion, he keep that for a month and the paint would be all scratched no matter what

  2. America has become a paranoid tribe of people who don’t handle tech well. A few years after 911 at an MSP airport car rental facility they noticed a “box with wires coming out of it’ in a returned rentals trunk. Bomb squad was called and duly dunked and detonated it. Turned out it was an electronic sensor for a biology research project that was forgotten!

  3. I’m going to guess these are held on by magnets… and he removes them when the car is in motion. As for the installation height… given the height of trucks and suvs… this might not be far off.

    Hardly elegant… but I’m not sure he needs to be mocked over this. Assuming, of course, that they come off when not in use. If not… he deserves to be mocked.

  4. Yeah, I don’t get how these look better than the generic self-adhesive rubber straps you can buy from Amazon.

    But, I also don’t understand how an ill-fitting rubber and Neoprene steering wheel condom somehow looks better than just the steering wheel

  5. The black tube inside must be magnetic. Wrapped in whatever he had laying around. I think the wires would prevent it from becoming a projectile or road debris if it ever came loose.

    Looks too high up to accomplish much. I think this may be something specific. Like a careless coworker with a high vehicle that’s dinged his doors more than once.

    Perhaps this guy works in an industrial field. Where the magnets and steel and cabling come easy, but hasn’t a clue about paint care or cosmetics.

    Honestly to me it doesn’t look like a bomb whatsoever. I first saw it and thought why the hell are there umbrellas attached to the doors?

  6. “A bomb?”
    “No officers… those are.. uh uh bumpers… yeah… rubber bumpers, to protect the doors from dings.”

    “Oh, on your way then. Sorry for the inconvenience.”

  7. I think the cables are on there to prevent these things from being stolen. I’m sure many thieves have walked up to this car many times and then been bitterly disappointed to find out they can’t easily steal these, obviously, valuable bumpers.

  8. This reminds me of the clear vinyl furniture covers and carpet runners some people used to “keep things looking nice.” Making them ugly so they stay nice?

    But maybe this guy’s car is a lease and he got hit with extra charges for door dings on his previous lease — got financially dinged for dings.

  9. Why not just buy some of those compressed foam hollow tubes (or even rubber tubes) and just slit them to slide into small straight brackets that are affixed to the inside door seams/hinges and a/b/c pillars? It’d cost like 10 bucks and wouldn’t ruin a whole heap of pillowcases.

  10. He pretty much went with the worst design for what he’s trying to accomplish. While I can’t see how attaching a protector will cause less damage than a few annoying door dings, why not just buy small roll of rubber tape from 3M? A few layers of that will do the job and look significantly better.

    1. I agree it would seem an odd place to attach a bomb, but I can certainly see how someone could look at that and think it might be an explosive, especially when there’s not another immediately obvious thing that it could be. Better to err on the side of caution here I think.

      1. Hannibal, noticing the police took the bait, now proclaims:

        “I love it when a plan comes together.”.

        The team now swoops in and steals a bunch of equipment from the police department garage.

    2. Also, I think the goal is generally for bombs to not be obvious so they aren’t stopped before they explode, just seems like inside the trunk would be a more likely place for a real one

  11. I can be pretty fanatical about my cars, especially when it comes to the mechanicals, but dings, scuffs, nicks from road debris, and hell even curb rash are all just part of owning a car that gets driven.

    1. All of the above is true, except curb rash. All others are somewhat unavoidable but curb rash is almost always a personal error, and a painful one especially when you go years trying to keep them perfect only for one small slip up to damage them.

      1. I blame the people who designed this dumb intersection near me with a way too small radius and curb right against the road with no shoulder, forcing me against the curb because trucks can’t fit in the turn (despite there being several business that get 18-wheeler deliveries there)
        Ok maybe it was still my fault, but fuck that turn.

    2. I am trying to change my ways. I have three nice cars, two black, and one dark cherry, that I try to project from dense and dings. I just bought a $4000 car to add to the fleet. It’s silver, and has about a million dints and dings already. The passenger side has a ding or dent about every 2 inches, all the way from the front fender to over the rear wheel, all at exactly the same level. Clearly a previous owner’s other car parked on that side, and dinged it often.

      It’s kinda freeing. Slightly too close parking spots I would bypass in my nicer cars, I can whip into with this one, and honestly not give a hoot.

  12. This reminds me a bit of an artist in the Seattle area named Subculture Joe. He’s best known for putting a ball and chain around the ankle of the Hammering Man, but earlier, he had a sculpture of a heart in the bed of a cheap pickup. It was driven into a public square, then the driver jumped out and slashed all the tires. This being a shitty old pickup, it had stuff written on it, including the words “the bomb.” Of course it shut down the city for hours. And this was in the 90s, I could only imagine how badly that stunt would have gone these days.

  13. Assuming these things are secured with magnets since that what it looks like, the duct tape and non-microfiber cloth material and wire are going to scratch THE HECK out of the paint and be way worse than a few tiny door dings

  14. Looks like something from a budget Mexican Drug Cartel movie.
    And what a wuss solution here. He just needs to glue some carpet of his choosing to the doors. Maybe do a door “wrap” with Hefty Bags and duct tape. Or just put on a shit load of the fake bullet stickers and not worry about the dings.

  15. I’ve heard in Korea they love to keep the little foam blocks taped to the trim for shipping on the car for this reason. Again, you start to wonder whether a car with a dent here and there wouldn’t look better than one done up like it’s in a motion capture suit.

      1. Dodge charger and challenger owners notoriously keep the shipping protector plastic on their bumpers. There’s a thriving secondary market for people who lost theirs. They’re literally trash but people pay good money for them.

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