Theoretical cruise control situation
#11
Senior Member
True Car Nut
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: The South
Posts: 3,281
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Originally Posted by BillBoost37
Yes Andrew, I read what he wrote and I responded as I saw appropriate.
Most people post a "theoretical" item in hopes that they can find a fix for an actual problem. Therefore if there is an actual problem here, I am asking for the symptoms and mentioning other possible causes of a surge/stuck accelerator type issue.
(lol)
Most people post a "theoretical" item in hopes that they can find a fix for an actual problem. Therefore if there is an actual problem here, I am asking for the symptoms and mentioning other possible causes of a surge/stuck accelerator type issue.
(lol)
#12
Junior Member
Posts like a Ricer Type-R
From a quick glance at the schematic, I'm going to say NO. At least not REMOTELY possible.
You'd have to short TWO wires to ground between the multifunction lever and the PCM at the same time, and the car couldn't ACCELLERATE. It would simply set.
You also have TWO brake inputs to disengage it should one or the other fail.
Don't go by the mistaken conclusion that it happened on a mercedes or ford so it must be possible. I'm quite sure we have a very different circuit design.
Is there an ACTUAL problem here, or not? If NOT, we'll move this topic to General Chat.
You'd have to short TWO wires to ground between the multifunction lever and the PCM at the same time, and the car couldn't ACCELLERATE. It would simply set.
You also have TWO brake inputs to disengage it should one or the other fail.
Don't go by the mistaken conclusion that it happened on a mercedes or ford so it must be possible. I'm quite sure we have a very different circuit design.
Is there an ACTUAL problem here, or not? If NOT, we'll move this topic to General Chat.
#14
Originally Posted by glorkar
wouldn't it be easier to push the cc **** to "off" than shift the car into neutral and turn the key off? Just a thought.
#15
Junior Member
Posts like a Ricer Type-R
He was talking about that wire being SHORTED to ground, so it couldn't be turned off. But more than one wire would have to be shorted, among other things. You'd literally have to have 3 or 4 very uncommon failures occur all at once.
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
OLBlueEyesBonne
Performance, Brainstorming & Tuning
15
05-17-2004 05:33 PM