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11-02-2007, 07:58 AM
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#1
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Registered Member
Join Date: Aug 2007
Posts: 313
Country: United States
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An Ideal Cruise Control
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11-02-2007, 08:18 AM
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#2
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Registered Member
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 230
Country: United States
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Quote:
Originally Posted by 2TonJellyBean
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Wouldn't that make a cool option to use when the normal cruise control is engaged on a car with an automatic??
Imagine setting "Ultra Economy" for when you are really out on the freeway and can let your car slow signifcantly w/o getting killed by other drivers when approaching small grades to keep the engine in its efficient band??
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-- Randall
McIntyre's First Law: " Under the right circumstances, anything I tell you may be wrong."
O'Brien's First Corollary to McIntyre's First Law: " I don't know what the right circumstances are, either."
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11-02-2007, 10:54 AM
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#4
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Registered Member
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 230
Country: United States
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Quote:
Originally Posted by skewbe
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scanned the thread....anyone implement it yet except as a monitor?
__________________
-- Randall
McIntyre's First Law: " Under the right circumstances, anything I tell you may be wrong."
O'Brien's First Corollary to McIntyre's First Law: " I don't know what the right circumstances are, either."
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11-02-2007, 04:54 PM
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#5
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Registered Member
Join Date: Jan 2007
Posts: 771
Country: United States
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Nope, just saying "that would be cool" too. It's a good head start on a working model though if anyone wants to do more than say "that would be cool"
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11-02-2007, 06:11 PM
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#6
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Registered Member
Join Date: Oct 2005
Posts: 1,978
Country: United States
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I've developed one...
Kinda.
It's a throttle-limited setup, which uses load on hills quite well. The design simply blocks the throttle that the cruise-control unit pulls.
The CC pulls the throttle cable similar to the foot pedal. I blocked the action of the rotating cam that pulls the cable -- basically governing the maximum throttle position. The TPS setting is around 20% maximum via CC.
Using it: set the cruise for 60 mph, for example. The car will generally hold the speed until the load overrides the throttle, then you scrub off speed and load it up. It works well if you're exhausted and have a long highway drive ahead. Then, the unintentional Psychology of not holding speed on hills is left up to the device and not your foot.
RH77
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11-04-2007, 06:41 AM
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#7
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Registered Member
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 230
Country: United States
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Quote:
Originally Posted by rh77
I've developed one...
Kinda.
It's a throttle-limited setup, which uses load on hills quite well. The design simply blocks the throttle that the cruise-control unit pulls.
The CC pulls the throttle cable similar to the foot pedal. I blocked the action of the rotating cam that pulls the cable -- basically governing the maximum throttle position. The TPS setting is around 20% maximum via CC.
Using it: set the cruise for 60 mph, for example. The car will generally hold the speed until the load overrides the throttle, then you scrub off speed and load it up. It works well if you're exhausted and have a long highway drive ahead. Then, the unintentional Psychology of not holding speed on hills is left up to the device and not your foot.
RH77
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How has it worked for you?
__________________
__________________
-- Randall
McIntyre's First Law: " Under the right circumstances, anything I tell you may be wrong."
O'Brien's First Corollary to McIntyre's First Law: " I don't know what the right circumstances are, either."
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