DIY & Safety
4 min read

What to Do If Your Car Is Hit While Parked in a Dallas Parking Lot

No witnesses, no note left — the unfortunately common DFW parking lot hit. What your insurance needs.

IY
Idris yas·NW Towing & Transportation

No witnesses, no note left — the unfortunately common DFW parking lot hit. What your insurance needs. Understanding the nuances of this situation can save you time, money, and stress. Here's a complete overview from NW Towing & Transportation's experienced DFW operations team.

1

Jump Starting a Modern Vehicle Correctly

Modern vehicles with sophisticated electronics are more sensitive to jump-start procedure errors than older cars. Always connect in the correct sequence: positive (red) to dead battery positive, positive to good battery positive, negative (black) to good battery negative, and finally negative to an unpainted metal ground on the dead car — not the negative battery terminal. This sequence minimizes the electrical spike when the circuit is completed.

Never jump-start a vehicle with a swollen, cracked, or leaking battery — these are signs of internal failure that can cause the battery to explode when current flows through it. And never allow the jumper cable clamps to touch each other once connected to either battery. The spark produced can ignite hydrogen gas that batteries emit during charging, with serious consequences.

2

When DIY Is the Right Call vs. Calling a Professional

Many roadside situations are genuinely DIY-manageable for prepared drivers: flat tires with a functional spare, dead batteries with a jump pack, minor lockouts when a spare key is accessible. These situations don't require a tow and can be resolved faster by a prepared driver than by waiting for roadside assistance in many cases.

But there are clear lines. If the vehicle is in an unsafe location, the problem involves the drivetrain, the vehicle is emitting smoke or fluid, or you're not confident in the repair — call a professional. A half-completed DIY tire change in the dark on I-35 is far more dangerous than waiting 20 minutes for a roadside technician who has done this a thousand times with proper lighting and equipment.

3

The Safety Gear Every Texas Driver Should Carry

A well-stocked emergency kit in your trunk can be the difference between a minor inconvenience and a dangerous situation. At a minimum, every vehicle in Texas should carry: LED road flares or reflective triangles, a jumper cable set or lithium jump starter, a tire plug kit and portable air compressor, a basic first aid kit, water (one gallon minimum), and a fully charged portable phone charger.

The items most commonly missing from driver emergency kits are reflective triangles and a portable phone charger. Reflective triangles are inexpensive and dramatically reduce the risk of a secondary collision at your breakdown scene. A charged phone charger ensures that a dead phone battery doesn't prevent you from calling for help — something that happens more often than you'd expect.

Ready for Help Now?

The next time you need towing or roadside assistance in DFW, make NW Towing & Transportation your first call. Fast response, professional operators, and honest pricing — every time, for every vehicle, anywhere in the metroplex. Call 214-882-0100 or request a quote online to get started.

Related topics:How to Safely Change a Tire on a Texas Highway