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I had to do 20 miles in an E30 with no throttle cable once. I just wound out the idle stop so it did about 5000rpm unloaded.
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# ? Jun 15, 2024 16:29 |
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I once had to be the gas pedal in my mom's 67 bug. It snapped off right at the pedal, so I just put a set of vice grips on it while my mom drove and I gave throttle as needed. Another fun time was snapping the clutch cable 30 miles from home and using the starter in first gear to get home. Luckily it had a brand new transmission with good synchros.
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veedubfreak posted:Luckily it had a brand new transmission with good synchros. Emphasis on "had".
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veedubfreak posted:I once had to be the gas pedal in my mom's 67 bug. It snapped off right at the pedal, so I just put a set of vice grips on it while my mom drove and I gave throttle as needed. Another fun time was snapping the clutch cable 30 miles from home and using the starter in first gear to get home. Luckily it had a brand new transmission with good synchros. After the throttle cable snapped in my 71 super stranding me 30 minutes from home I started keeping a spare in the glovebox. Came in handy more times then I care to remember.
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veedubfreak posted:I once had to be the gas pedal in my mom's 67 bug. It snapped off right at the pedal, so I just put a set of vice grips on it while my mom drove and I gave throttle as needed. Another fun time was snapping the clutch cable 30 miles from home and using the starter in first gear to get home. Luckily it had a brand new transmission with good synchros.
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Francis Baconator posted:Stories like this (no matter how cool) remind me that the choir preaching how drive by wire sucks isn't always right. Don't get me wrong, I like the tactile feedback of a cable, but they have the potential to be inconvenient at best and dangerous at worst. At lot of vehicles that use throttle cables are old enough to need replacing, something most people don't consider. These days, drive by wire is consistently reliable for nearly all manufacturers, with the exception of the most egregious bean counters (looking at you, "new" GM). ![]() It's not like they can't fail themselves, just in different ways.
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I really dislike DBW that gets in my way. Just do what I asked, you fuckhead car. There are only a few cases where I think it's awesome - it's great for helping with electronic stability / traction control (assuming non idiots designed it), and great for stuff like automatic rev matching for upshifts and downshifts, which appeals to me as an engineer, but not much as a driver. Amusingly none of this applies to 13"s car, seeing as it has like 9 wires in the entire thing and most of them are turn signals and the horn ![]()
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Francis Baconator posted:At lot of vehicles that use throttle cables are old enough to need replacing, something most people don't consider. petition to run this heretic out of AI
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PERHAPS AUTOMOTIVE SENSIBILITY MIGHT BE A LITTLE MORE YOUR SPEED
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OFFICER 13 INCH posted:petition to run this heretic out of AI Signed. I don't like DBW even though I had a throttle cable failure on an old carbie car. I don't even have to compare old cars with carbies to DBW. There was a huge difference in throttle response between my EL falcon (EFI - Cable) and BA falcon (EFI - DBW)
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Francis Baconator posted:Stories like this (no matter how cool) remind me that the choir preaching how drive by wire sucks isn't always right. Don't get me wrong, I like the tactile feedback of a cable, but they have the potential to be inconvenient at best and dangerous at worst. At lot of vehicles that use throttle cables are old enough to need replacing, something most people don't consider. These days, drive by wire is consistently reliable for nearly all manufacturers, with the exception of the most egregious bean counters (looking at you, "new" GM). I've never heard of anyone breaking a throttle cable on a Japanese car, even an 80s model with hundreds of thousands of kilometers and no one pro-actively replaces them.
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What about Japanese cars from the 70s?
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Fo3 posted:What about Japanese cars from the 70s? Well I haven't heard of any failures there either but the only ones left on the road here tend to be well looked after examples, which have often had replacement engines (or swaps) anyway so they don't really count.
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My car has a throttle cable to run a DBW sensor, what now? No, I'm serious, what the gently caress now Peugeot? What is that poo poo? ![]()
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Cable guy must have been union, only willing to run it so many centimetres.
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jammyozzy posted:My car has a throttle cable to run a DBW sensor, what now? Bikes do this poo poo too....
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jammyozzy posted:My car has a throttle cable to run a DBW sensor, what now? Probably dropped a DBW engine into a car with a cable throttle and didn't want to redesign the throttle system to accommodate a matching pedal assembly, last model year or two of the chassis or whatever.
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jammyozzy posted:My car has a throttle cable to run a DBW sensor, what now? I believe you answered your own question.
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GoodbyeTurtles posted:I believe you answered your own question. I believe it was Peugeot that shoehorned a 6 speed transmission into a chassis that wasn't designed for it by fitting a steering rack that had different amounts of lock left and right
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That's beautiful ![]()
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Early 2000's bikes and some cars used a traditional cable and butterfly and a second electronic butterfly that would only open as fast as the engine could respond, acting like a constant velocity carb. Maybe it's something like that? Or maybe it's only purpose is to even out the input and improve mileage, I dunno. I have no beef with drive by wire throttles except for having to plan ahead .5 seconds when I want the gas to come on. I seriously doubt any of the systems out there now will be performing as well as a cable in 40 years time and that goes double for the finicky crap in my e60. Also when it does go I cant use a shoelace tied to the throttle and run through the quarter window to get me home drive around for a few days like in my old Sprite.
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dissss posted:I believe it was Peugeot that shoehorned a 6 speed transmission into a chassis that wasn't designed for it by fitting a steering rack that had different amounts of lock left and right The same chassis I think, I believe my dad's 306 GTi-6 had this exact 'feature'. Mine's a diesel, so it's not like there's even a throttle body to gently caress about with.
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Jesus christ, that's like Sopwith Camel: now in automobile trim!
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kastein posted:I really dislike DBW that gets in my way. Just do what I asked, you fuckhead car. Yeah, this. I rented a U-haul recently (not a performance vehicle to be sure) that was a recent Chevy van model. I swear to God nothing happens for the first 1/4 of the pedal travel then all of a sudden WHEEEE it catches and you're off and running. Driving smoothly at low speed was all but impossible. I imagine it's an emissions/mileage thing for hamfists that just treat the throttle like a light switch but it's seriously annoying.
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OFFICER 13 INCH posted:petition to run this heretic out of AI OFFICER 13 INCH posted:PERHAPS AUTOMOTIVE SENSIBILITY MIGHT BE A LITTLE MORE YOUR SPEED ![]() Gotta respect your stance after driving home with the choke and still loving the cable.
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Listen man I use sections of rusty barbwire coated in fiberglass for sounding rods i aint gonna let no piece of poo poo little cable get in my way
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Also it was more the old enough to be replaced line that would pretty much eliminate the need for this forum if everyone drove a car new enough to be dbw that I took issue with ![]()
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OFFICER 13 INCH posted:Also it was more the old enough to be replaced line that would pretty much eliminate the need for this forum if everyone drove a car new enough to be dbw that I took issue with ![]()
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Psh, throttle cables and DBW. Clearly the correct answer is a throttle linkage that consists of a lever on the pedal and a rod going to the carburetor. Don't have to worry about your 1/8" rod breaking on your drive home. Why make it more complicated by using a cable?
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Raluek posted:Psh, throttle cables and DBW. Clearly the correct answer is a throttle linkage that consists of a lever on the pedal and a rod going to the carburetor. Don't have to worry about your 1/8" rod breaking on your drive home. Why make it more complicated by using a cable? I used to have this, it was p. cool but the pedal was held to the rod with a ball and socket joint and kept popping out if you weren't experienced with driving it.
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Raluek posted:Psh, throttle cables and DBW. Clearly the correct answer is a throttle linkage that consists of a lever on the pedal and a rod going to the carburetor. Don't have to worry about your 1/8" rod breaking on your drive home. Why make it more complicated by using a cable? This is what I have on the C10. Dont even have a pedal, just the metal rod coming out of the firewall and connected to another rod to the carb, like a boss. I drove my first DBW car in years a couple weeks ago when I did the tbelt on that Audi and it sucked so bad. Took forever to respond and then when it did it held revs like it had a 500 lb flywheel, rev matching/etc sucked.
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Raluek posted:Clearly the correct answer is a throttle linkage that consists of a lever on the pedal and a rod going to the carburetor. Don't have to worry about your 1/8" rod breaking on your drive home.
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I think the DBW in my audi is pretty great. Linear and responsive
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That sounds remarkably like a complex expensive electrical system emulating a simple cheap throttle cable, then. I say that as an embedded systems engineer in the midst of putting well over 40 microcontrollers and likely several million lines of firmware code (one of em runs Linux, or it'd be under half a million) on a car/plane. KISS principle still applies, especially on critical stuff like brakes, steering, and throttle.
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You fuckers bitch about DBW, but you ain' lived till you drove DBA. (drive by air) OR Drove a bus with a mechanical throttle/clutch linkage 40 god drat feet long, with a shifter and linkage 40 god drat feet long, all on no syncros!
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kastein posted:Jesus christ, that's like Sopwith Camel: now in automobile trim! I had no idea what a Sopwith Camel was so I looked it up and this little tidbit just greatly tickled me:
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Everyone knows the best throttle is having the cover off of your vans engine and driving with one hand on the wheel and one on the carb directly. Bonus points if you don't have a fuel pump and control rpm by the speed of your pour of gas out of a beer can.
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cursedshitbox posted:You fuckers bitch about DBW, but you ain' lived till you drove DBA. (drive by air) Ah, the mk1 hillman imp. The gas pedal actuates a pump, that compresses air which controls a second pump at the Solex carburetor at the back of the car. A lovely idea, but the rubber hoses had a nasty habit of deteriorating and leaking, so you'd have to pump out the accelerator pedal if you wanted to keep up the revs. SO glad my imp is cable controlled.
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The Midniter posted:I had no idea what a Sopwith Camel was so I looked it up and this little tidbit just greatly tickled me: those aren't rotary engines aaaaaaaa ![]()
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# ? Jun 15, 2024 16:29 |
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Yeah, they're the original whole radial engine spins around the stationary crankshaft, uses as much oil as fuel, with lovely characteristics due to gyroscopic forces that you wouldn't want in an aircraft type of rotary.
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