ataDude
Mod Maniac
... As you may have read in the past, I have had a few infrequent times where the power steering (DSP) "caught" in a curve and was very hard to push through the "catch".
On two other occasions (five minutes apart), while on a straight-a-way, the steering actually pulled me into the lane immediately to the left. (No, it was not the highway design, either... I was watching carefully after the first time because it scared the crap out of me.) Thankfully, that was on west bound IH-40 in Oklahoma on an early Sunday morning with little, or no, traffic.
Just this last weekend, I had a combination of the "steering catch" and gear position errors at the same time... at least, it was the first time that I noticed the two issues at the same time.
On this last ride, the gear position indicator sometimes would indicate an "E" when in 5th gear... or indicate 4th when I was actually in 5th. (No, not soft shifting, either.) At the same time, the steering problem/"catch" occurred.
As we have a CAN Bus (Controller Area Network)... probably a Bosch, if I had to bet... which was created for automobiles to eliminate wiring... I'm guessing that maybe sub-areas are conflicting... or the controller is going nuts not knowing what to do with what signal. I know they're not supposed to... dominant versus recessive signals... identifier bits and the like... but...
I saw one post a week or so ago that said an uneven, rough idle was "fixed" after a new gear position sensor was installed under warranty... an added plus for the person. BTW, I've had this uneven idle since new and BUDDs said nothing was wrong.
I'll get the dealer to order a new gear position sensor before I take it in... maybe in a week or two.
However...
For you bit-heads... can errors from one device (sensor) cause errors in another? I thought all of the bits and bytes were specifically identified so that this couldn't occur... that the CAN controller referee'd the traffic?
If so, could a continual error from one device prevent other devices from functioning correctly? I understand that the signals are not timed... that if a "collision" of data occurs, the non-dominant signal just fades away into nothingness... to be retried later.
I'm just curious... always want to know more.
BTW, does this controller run Windows? :joke: Oh, no... not another blue screen! :yikes:
On two other occasions (five minutes apart), while on a straight-a-way, the steering actually pulled me into the lane immediately to the left. (No, it was not the highway design, either... I was watching carefully after the first time because it scared the crap out of me.) Thankfully, that was on west bound IH-40 in Oklahoma on an early Sunday morning with little, or no, traffic.
Just this last weekend, I had a combination of the "steering catch" and gear position errors at the same time... at least, it was the first time that I noticed the two issues at the same time.
On this last ride, the gear position indicator sometimes would indicate an "E" when in 5th gear... or indicate 4th when I was actually in 5th. (No, not soft shifting, either.) At the same time, the steering problem/"catch" occurred.
As we have a CAN Bus (Controller Area Network)... probably a Bosch, if I had to bet... which was created for automobiles to eliminate wiring... I'm guessing that maybe sub-areas are conflicting... or the controller is going nuts not knowing what to do with what signal. I know they're not supposed to... dominant versus recessive signals... identifier bits and the like... but...
I saw one post a week or so ago that said an uneven, rough idle was "fixed" after a new gear position sensor was installed under warranty... an added plus for the person. BTW, I've had this uneven idle since new and BUDDs said nothing was wrong.
I'll get the dealer to order a new gear position sensor before I take it in... maybe in a week or two.
However...
For you bit-heads... can errors from one device (sensor) cause errors in another? I thought all of the bits and bytes were specifically identified so that this couldn't occur... that the CAN controller referee'd the traffic?
If so, could a continual error from one device prevent other devices from functioning correctly? I understand that the signals are not timed... that if a "collision" of data occurs, the non-dominant signal just fades away into nothingness... to be retried later.
I'm just curious... always want to know more.
BTW, does this controller run Windows? :joke: Oh, no... not another blue screen! :yikes:
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