Last night when my wife got home, she remarked that there was a 'strange sound coming from the house next door' and I went outside to listen. It sounded just like a small generator or air compressor running, so we ignored it and got ready for bed. Maybe 20 minutes later there is a loud 'bang' which I assumed was the generator backfiring (mine ALWAYS does when I shut it off), but I figured I'd take another listen. En route to the balcony I see out the window what looks like the side of the house on fire, so I tell my wife to call the fire department, while I rouse my son and we run next door to see if the guy is ok, and the house too (since we own it). Turns out the CAR was on fire, and though it was parked almost underneath the balcony, my son's spraying water on it until the fire department kept it from igniting (places he wasn't hitting often enough with the water were having the sap boil out of the wood).
So. . . neighbor says the car is (was) a 2000 BMW that he got used a few months ago, and it has functioned perfectly, and was running just fine on the way home. He got home, turned the car off, and went inside to get ready for bed. I don't know if he heard the 'generator' kind of noise or not - he may have been in the shower or something. I guess much of the engine or transmission contains magnesium, so even after the car was so far gone you could spray water into the trunk and nothing stopped it before it hit the front bumper, the area where the engine and transmission used to be was still white-hot and wouldn't go out.
I've read before about cars just catching fire like that, but always wondered what in heck happens.
What is fortunate is that the garage-door doesn't work well, so tenants usually don't park inside the garage, which is underneath the livingroom in the ALL REDWOOD house.
