Popular automotive journalist and farmer Jeremy Clarkson, who spent years reviewing cars on BBC's Top Gear and touring in them on The Grand Tour, has reacted to the sale of his famous 2006 Ford GT, pointing to a problem that haunted him after he bought the car, causing him considerable embarrassment.Clarkson loved the Ford GT immensely. However, in Top Gear's episode 4 of season 6, the car refused to start at the Top Gear test track the day after he bought it. He eventually had to return home in a Toyota Corolla Verso. At the Ford dealership, it was discovered that a faulty immobilizer was the culprit, not the car. Some reports suggest the GT was fitted with an aftermarket security system that caused the problem.While the dealership claimed to fix it, Clarkson's GT set off its security alarms at random hours, even waking him and his family in the middle of the night. On his way back to the Ford dealership, Clarkson began to receive calls and messages from the car's security system, warning him his GT had been stolen, whereas in reality, he was the one driving it.AdvertisementAdvertisementClearly, there was an issue with the confused security system. Assuming the Ford dealership had fixed the problem the second time, Clarkson drove the GT to the Top Gear test track. However, he was once again flooded with messages of his car being stolen.Image Courtesy: Carl Hartley on InstagramHilariously, his colleagues Richard Hammond and James May mocked Clarkson's new purchase. He eventually sold the GT later that year to make way for a Lamborghini Gallardo Spyder. Now, though, the Ford GT has appeared for sale once again, revealed in an Instagram post by Carl Hartley. The caption reads:"New arrival! 2006 Ford GT originally owned by motoring legend @jeremyclarkson1 finished in Blue with a white racing stripes, 1 of 101 EU supplied cars, fantastic service history with @gt101.co.uk and presented in beautiful condition, 28,000 miles on sale now!" [sic]AdvertisementAdvertisementBut it seems as though the faulty security alarm has had a deep effect on Clarkson, as he still recollects the issue even after two decades. The former Top Gear presenter posted a funny comment on Hartley's sale post, hoping that the new owner won't have to face similar issues. He wrote:"I hope they've fixed the alarm!!!"