Ugh, I am being inundated with comment spam.
I am tightening the policy for comments, from now on, only users with an OpenID or other form that Blogger accepts can comment.
Wednesday, December 28, 2011
Monday, December 12, 2011
List of ECU functions to determine
List of ECU functions to determine
• fuel delivery • transmission shift points • valve timing • ignition timing, etc. sensors also monitor • oxygen levels of inlet air • oxygen levels of exhaust air • temperatures of inlet air • temperatures of exhaust • temperatures of oil • temperatures of coolant • temperatures of all other fluids like brake, clutch, transmission etc • sensors also monitors and controls functions of features such as ABS, EBD, EPS, ESP, SRS (airbags), etc. whichever applicable.
• fuel delivery • transmission shift points • valve timing • ignition timing, etc. sensors also monitor • oxygen levels of inlet air • oxygen levels of exhaust air • temperatures of inlet air • temperatures of exhaust • temperatures of oil • temperatures of coolant • temperatures of all other fluids like brake, clutch, transmission etc • sensors also monitors and controls functions of features such as ABS, EBD, EPS, ESP, SRS (airbags), etc. whichever applicable.
Wednesday, December 7, 2011
Monday, December 5, 2011
Bridgestone Airless Tire Concept
Cool. From PhysOrg.com.
Michelin has also been working on the Tweel airless tire for some time now, but it isn't ready for civilian commercial sale, yet.

Thursday, November 17, 2011
Tuesday, November 15, 2011
Smelly Anarchists Begone!
NYC has finally had enough of the Occupy Wall Street crowd in Zuccotti park. A judge has denied a lawsuit for a restraining order against NYPD, on the grounds that
To the extent that City law prohibits the erection of structures, the use of gas or other
combustible materials, and the accumulation of garbage and human waste in public places,
enforcement of the law and the owner's rules appears reasonable to permit the owner to maintain its
space in a hygienic, safe, and lawful condition, and to prevent it from being liable by the City or others
for violations of law, or in tort. It also permits public access by those who live and work in the area
who are the intended beneficiaries of this zoning bonus.
The movants have not demonst rated that they have a First Amendment right to remain in
Zuccotti Park, along with their tents, structures, generators, and other installations to the exclusion
of the owner's reasonable rights and duties to maintain Zuccotti Park, or to the rights to public access
of others who might wish to use the space safely. Neither have the applicants shown a right to a
temporary restraining order that would restrict the City's enforcement of law so as to promote public
health and safety.
Presumably, now the NYPD will begin moving the squatters out of Zuccotti park, so that the damage can be repaired.
Monday, November 7, 2011
The End of Saab (Again)?
This might be the be the end for Saab. GM is stating that it does not support the sale of Saab to two Chinese auto companies. Without financing, Saab is likely to be liquidated by the Swedish courts, a process that was suspended when Saab made a deal to sell itself.
I have friends who own Saabs, and I wonder what will happen to them as far as vehicle service and replacement parts go. Perhaps someone will step up and buy the parts inventory, if there is money to be made in service. Some Saab models are really re-badged GM or Subaru vehicles, so those likely can be serviced at those dealerships.
Prius Smugness Run Amok
Smug Prius owner goes apesh*t because a guy is idling his diesel pickup in an adjacent parking spot.
Monday, October 31, 2011
Wednesday, October 19, 2011
Sonic Drop Breaks Down?
Chevy is doing a stunt to promote the new Sonic b-car. They are dropping it off of a huge tower attached to a bungee cord, and using web clicks to move it towards the edge of the leap.
Looks like it broke, though.
I hope those guys are careful.
Monday, October 17, 2011
Electric Delorean?
Jalopnik's Kevin McCauley was invited to test drive a Delorean DMCEV, an electric conversion applied to a Delorean chassis by the new Delorean Motor Company. DMC hopes to build these for sale in 2013.
It will be a really cool looking car, but remember that this thing is built on a 1980's design. It wouldn't pass modern handling or crash standards. And chances are, it will be really expensive--because to avoid meeting the modern standards, each one of these will have to be a conversion of an existing Delorean chassis with an existing VIN. In other words, take a rare car, and then apply expensive electronics and batteries.
I have to say, though, the Delorean is still a great looking car.
Electric DeTomaso, Pantera, anyone?
Sunday, October 16, 2011
Blackwood Sighting
The Lincoln Blackwood was a white elephant for Lincoln. A car that
did well as a concept but flopped bad in production. I saw this one
the other night.
did well as a concept but flopped bad in production. I saw this one
the other night.
Wednesday, October 5, 2011
Ford Quietly Kills Off Hybrid Escape?
Ford has announced that the next Escape, based on the European Kuga, will come with 3 flavors of I4 engines, 1.6L Ecoboost (GTDI), 2.0L Ecboost, and 2.5L NA. No mention was made of the hybrid powertrain currently available, giving Ford bragging rights to "most fuel efficient SUV". So it looks like Ford is quietly killing off the hybrid Escape in favor of the C-Max hybrid and plug-in hybrid.
If I have this wrong, Ford PR is invited to comment.
Tuesday, September 27, 2011
My Sad HP Tale
I decided to replace my stuttering old Dell Optiplex desktop (Core 2 circa 2008) with a new desktop. I saw a very good deal on Woot!--an HP Pavilion with a quad core AMD CPU and 1TB HDD for all of $300. It was, of course, refurbished.
That was a mistake.
The HP came loaded down with crapware (trials, useless media players, etc.). The Pavilion case was made of very thin metal, and thing made a lof of an and drive noise compared to my old machine. But the worse part was that it came broken. Despite having 4 RAM slots, the motherboard would not boot if I put more than 2 sticks of memory in it. HP agreed this was an issue, but informed me my machine was out of warranty. After several long phone calls with customer service (in India) I finally got them to extend my warranty to the proper 90 days, and accept the machine for repair.
It came back with a new motherboard, and would accept more memory. But this one would run for a seemingly random amount of time, and then freeze solid. It wouldn't even write the errors into the Windows system log, so I had no way of knowing what was wrong.
The machine went back to Woot for a refund, and I bought a factory refurbished Dell Optiplex 780, with Intel Core 2 Quad CPU.
The Dell Optiplex came with no crapware, other than a a free trial for a virus scanner, which was easily removed. The machine is quiet, and fast, and with a free web coupon, it was cheap too. And, unlike the HP, the Dell came with a 3 year warranty, and an actual restore DVD.
Thursday, September 15, 2011
HEVs: Make Some Noise
The industry is busy trying to decide what noise HEVs and BEVs should make when running in electric mode.
My humble proposal is here.
Friday, August 26, 2011
Ford, Toyota Co-Developing RWD HEV Powertrain
The new CAFE standards are proving to be a real matchmaker. Ford and Toyota have jointly announced a co-development program to develop a RWD hybrid powertrain.
Ford,of course, is one of the top sellers of light trucks (F150) and body on frame SUVs (Expedition, Navigator). Toyota is not a major player in trucks, but does sell Tundra and a variety of BOF SUVs such as the Sequoia and 4Runner. By working together, the two companies can reduce the high development costs of a new hybrid powertrain, and eventually be able to meet or exceed the CAFE standards for light trucks.
What is odd, to me, about this tie-up is the cooperation between to major rivals. Remember recently the dust-up over IP, when Ford and Toyota agreed to cross-license HEV patents, and the ensuing confusion in the consumers mind, where some people thought Ford was buying Toyota's Prius system. Why not GM? GM/Allison have been doing RWD truck hybrids for a while now. Oh, maybe this is why not.
In general, we are going to see more of these cooperative moves. For example, Chrysler will need to get in bed with someone to develop their own truck hybrid system, as trucks are a big part of Chrysler's business model.
Friday, August 19, 2011
Pre-Cruise: Public Safety Fun On Woodward
Woodward Pre-Cruise: The Focus ST
I took off of work early today and went to Fashionable Ferndale to see if I could find Ford's Focus ST which they were going to show off. Hidden in plain view behind a trailer, and freshly detailed, here it is in its golden glory.
A few observations. I tried to see if I could tell if it has the new REVO knuckle or not, so I took a few undercarriage photos. I'm still not sure, because there wasn't much space to put a camera down there. However, this one is clearly FWD, not AWD as some had hoped.

Some cladding in the way, hard to see the front suspension.
No RWD on this one.
Formula 1 2011 Australian Grand Prix (2011)
Formula 1 2011 Australian Grand Prix (2011)
The 2011 Formula 1 TM Qantas Australian event is the country's most spectacular sporting event and will feature an impressive array of both on-track and off-track activities for people of all ages to enjoy. If you've never experienced the thrill of a Formula 1 TM car racing by at speeds of more than 300 km/h, make 2011 your opportunity to witness this unforgettable phenomenon.
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The 2011 Formula 1 TM Qantas Australian event is the country's most spectacular sporting event and will feature an impressive array of both on-track and off-track activities for people of all ages to enjoy. If you've never experienced the thrill of a Formula 1 TM car racing by at speeds of more than 300 km/h, make 2011 your opportunity to witness this unforgettable phenomenon.
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Just Click This Link To Redirect Sockshare Source
Wednesday, August 17, 2011
California Clean Cars Confusion
In California, an umbrella organization called the California Clean Cars Initiative is advocating ever tougher standards. It is a coalition of various organizations, including respectable ones such as American Cancer Society and the American Lung Association, and others which are more pollitlcally radical such as The Center for Auto Safety (trial lawyers) and Union of Concerned Scientists.
And, as usual, Consumers Union joins with the lefties to advocate for unaffordable cars, in opposition to their consumer oriented mission.
One trick that the CCCI pulls is that they conflate "healthy" and "clean" air with "climate change". I think everyone agrees that smog forming compounds such as NOx and ammonia are dangerous. The automakers have met every LEV requirement thrown at them, drastically reducing the amount of air pollution from combustion and fuel evaporation.
However, CO2 is not a carcinogen, and it doesn't form smog or acid rain. It's plant food. Hypothetically, a hydrocarbon fuelled vehicle could be designed which would combust its fuel so cleanly, and apply an effective aftertreatment, so that the exhaust would be composed only of CO2, NO2, and H20--complete combustion, with allowance for nitrogen interactions. However, CCCI would not consider this "clean and healthy" air, because of the global warming lobby.
CCCI would be better off advocating for the removal of dirty-running old cars from California's roads, and going after non-transportation sources such as lawnmowers, boats, and airplanes, if they were serious about the health effects of real pollution.
Yaris Fail
I have not seen the new Toyota Yaris in person yet. Maybe I'll cross paths with one on Woodward this weekend. Anyway, looking at the photos and early impressions from other reviewers, I think I can sum it up by quoting Toyota's Yaris tagline.
"Yaris. It's A Car."
Or, to quote the ever snarky Car And Driver, "Yep, it's a car. There's not much else to say."
In other words, Toyota is making no effort to build an interesting small car. They are relying on their reputation for safe, comfortable, reliable cars, and a little bit of styling upate, to try to compete against a very hot small car marketplace. Meanwhile, Fiat 500 brings style and cute by the bucket. Ford Fiesta and Mazda2 bring sharp styling and zippy handling. Honda's Fit brings excellent packaging, good handling, and good fuel economy. Chevy Rio brings interesting styling and promises strong performance.
So why the capitulation? The b-car space is going to become more important as fuel economy targets tighten, it seems odd that Toyota would hold back. If I had to guess, I would say that Toyota was saving its powder for its refresh of its key product, the Camry.
Friday, August 12, 2011
Goodyear's AMT Project
Goodyear is working on an R&D project to design and demonstrate truck tires which maintain their own pressure with some sort of internal pump and valve system.
Goodyear's Air Maintenance Technology (AMT) will enable tires to remain inflated at the optimum pressure without the need for any external pumps or electronics. All components of the AMT system, including the miniaturized pump, will be fully contained within the tire.
This is an interesting idea, and not totally new, a company called CODA in the Czech Republic has been promoting a design recently which self inflates.
However, the problem with this concept is that it scavenges energy from the tire rotation to pump the air--which will increase rolling resistance. There is huge pressure on tire makers to reduce rolling resistance as part of fuel economy improvements. Unless the government somehow gives credit for the technology to reduce the up-front efficiency hit, I don't see automakers being enthusiastic in replacing their old fashioned tires. That's because fuel economy tests are performed in a lab, and tires are always properly inflated.
Goodyear press release here.
Thursday, August 11, 2011
The Steer Safe: Are The Joking?
There is a hilariously bad invention up on Kickstarter called Steer Safe which is supposed to help people "safely" use their smartphone while driving, by hanging it from the top of the wheel on a cradle.

Why is this so bad that it is funny?
Well, for one thing, it isn't even remotely "safe". It blocks the drivers view of the vehicles instruments. It encourages fiddling with a touch screen while driving. It may interfere with good hand-to-hand steering. And, perhaps most dangerous of all, it is close to the deployment zone of the driver's airbag.
Can you imagine the damage that thing could do, if you are in an accident with airbag activation? As your body moves forward during the crash, the airbag flap opens violently, flinging a glass and metal smartphone up towards your forehead.
Or in a rear-end accident, your iPhone becomes a projectile, snapping out of its holder and flying towards your face.
This thing is so poorly thought out, I have to believe that they guy posting it is joking. Right?

Why is this so bad that it is funny?
Well, for one thing, it isn't even remotely "safe". It blocks the drivers view of the vehicles instruments. It encourages fiddling with a touch screen while driving. It may interfere with good hand-to-hand steering. And, perhaps most dangerous of all, it is close to the deployment zone of the driver's airbag.
Can you imagine the damage that thing could do, if you are in an accident with airbag activation? As your body moves forward during the crash, the airbag flap opens violently, flinging a glass and metal smartphone up towards your forehead.
Or in a rear-end accident, your iPhone becomes a projectile, snapping out of its holder and flying towards your face.
This thing is so poorly thought out, I have to believe that they guy posting it is joking. Right?
Review: id America Gasket iPhone Case
id America, a maker of iPhone cases and covers, sent me their Gasket iPhone case to review.
The case is made of brushed aluminum, and is designed to look like an engine block, with cut0uts reminiscent of cylinder bores and cooling passages. In addition to the aluminum shell, the case comes with two clear protectors, for the back and for the front screen. The aluminum shell has a suede inner lining to cushion the phone.
I found the case to fit the phone snugly, and the screen protectors did their job without ruining the usability or feel of the touch screen. Installation was not too hard, though it does take some practice to attach the clear protective film (using the supplied squeegee) without leaving any dreaded air bubbles. Once I had it together, the case felt sturdy and substantial.
Overall, I found the case attractive and effective. I like the automotive inspired design. I would definitely buy one for myself, or as a gift for a fellow gear-head.
The Gasket case can be purchasd from id America here for $30.
The case is made of brushed aluminum, and is designed to look like an engine block, with cut0uts reminiscent of cylinder bores and cooling passages. In addition to the aluminum shell, the case comes with two clear protectors, for the back and for the front screen. The aluminum shell has a suede inner lining to cushion the phone.I found the case to fit the phone snugly, and the screen protectors did their job without ruining the usability or feel of the touch screen. Installation was not too hard, though it does take some practice to attach the clear protective film (using the supplied squeegee) without leaving any dreaded air bubbles. Once I had it together, the case felt sturdy and substantial.
Overall, I found the case attractive and effective. I like the automotive inspired design. I would definitely buy one for myself, or as a gift for a fellow gear-head.
The Gasket case can be purchasd from id America here for $30.
Wednesday, August 3, 2011
CAFE: Rise Of The Turbo
One way that automakers will meet the new CAFE standards will be to downsize engines and add turbocharging, as a relatively inexpensive and proven way to get variable displacement. And with direct injection and EGR, the ignition charge can be kept cool, allowing the engine to run highly efficiently on regular octane rating gasoline.
This won't be entirely popular, because even today's low mass, twinned turbos do have some power lag, and they do make different and more annoying noises than a traditional big bore motor. Personally, I would drive a 2.0L gasoline or diesel turbo over a 3.0L naturally aspirated engine, if it would save me 20% or more on fuel, whatever noises it makes.
Another concern about turbos is their durability. I think that Audi, Volvo, Saab, and most recently Ford have proven that modern turbos are robust and can last for the design life of the engine. Ford's "torture test" YouTube series is entertaining, if you want to see a turbo engine severely abused.
The reason turbos help fuel economy is that at low engine load, say when you are cruising down the highway, your engine isn't using much of its power, the turbo isn't really running, and the engine is like a 2.0L I4. However, when you are accelerating, or otherwise making a high power demand, the turbo spools up and allows the engine to consume more air (and fuel), temporarily making it more like the 3.0L V6 you used to drive. Because the EPA fuel economy tests have a good bit of steady state driving, and idling, this variable displacement effect of the turbo really helps the MPG rating.
A smaller turbo engine, all else being equal, will also tend to be lighter weight than a comparable larger engine, which is another source of fuel economy gain.
Since turbos are cheaper than batteries and electric motors, the early CAFE gains are likely to happen through engine downsizing rather than hybridization. The next steps will probably be mild hybrids (start/stop, launch torque) coupled with downsized turbocharged engines.
Engineers: CAFE Won't Be Easy
Wards has published a survey of 1,100 automotive engineers (I am sure I was one respondent) which highlights the trade-offs required to meet the new high CAFE standards.
The best part of the article is some of the comments left in the open ended comment box:
In all, survey respondents left 100 pages worth of comments.
"Consumers don't understand what this will cost, and environmental groups don't care," is a typical comment.
"Aerodynamic blobs on the way," another quips.
Monday, August 1, 2011
The Mighty Have Fallen
Wow.
Consumer Reports, formerly certified fanboys of Honda, have utterly dogged the 2012 Civic.
It isn't recommended. Too boring, too plasticky.
Honda had better be careful.. if they stray too far from their zippy heritage, they are going to get eaten by the very aggressive new up and comers such as Elantra and Focus.
Wednesday, July 27, 2011
The Truth About 60MPG
There is furious lobbying going on, as the automakers and the greens try to sway the Obama administration on future CAFE standards. The greens, including Consumer Reports, NRDC, and others are claiming that not only is 60MPG feasible, but it will be good for us. Here are some of their main claims.
Increase performance and gas mileage with a performance chip. Performance Chips Direct sells ECU chips for trucks and cars.
1) 60MPG will increase jobs and profitability of the Big 3. Apparently, Citibank looked into a crystal ball and decided that the Big 3 market share and margins would increase with higher fuel economy vehicles. But the Big 3 rely on large vehicles, even today, for a lot of their profits. And jobs? That depends. If free trade with China continues, I see batteries and other components coming from China, which is a powerhouse in rare earth mining and raw materials processing. Look at it this way--in the rise of Li-Ion batteries for tools and laptop computers, where are all the parts coming from? China and Korea.2) 60MPG will not cost much, and will pay for itself. True, at $4/gal, a 60MPG car will pay back a sizeable premium in 3-4 years. However, the cost estimates of some the technology are pie-in-the-sky. What happens to li-ion battery costs if we start making millions of relatively huge car batteries? Are the greens ready to strip-mine China for lithium? What about the supply of rare earth metals for the powerful magnets needed by the motor/generators?3) Americans want 60MPG cars. Sure they do--but they don't want to pay much for them. As many surveys have shown, when you attach costs to highly efficient cars, interest drops off rapidly. Today, there are numerous highly efficient small and medium cars available. However, trucks and SUVs are still hot sellers. What Americans really want is free efficiency. They want large cars and cheap gas. They want fat free french fries.4) 60MPG is within easy reach, with off the shelf tech. Sure, for small and mid-sized cars. Give me a B/C platform and let me add a couple of thousand dollars in engine upgrades, more transmission gears, aluminum and high strength steel components. You'll have a 60MPG small car that costs $25,000. Great. Now, how do you do it for a mid-sized SUV or minivan? Or the Texas workhorse, the 1-ton pickup? Not so easy.
Here are some of my thoughts about CAFE standards.
So what is the answer?A) Reducing vehicle weight will reduce overall safety, or add cost due to expensive countermeasures like additional airbags. It's physics. In a two car crash, the heavier car does better. Until all the old heavy vehicles are off of the road, about 10 years after the lightweight ones are introduced, the new vehicles will be at a disadvantage.B) High CAFE standards will increase up-front costs, and reduce sales. Suppose CAFE adds $4,000 in today's money to a typical family vehicle. Some people will respond by buying used, some will buy smaller or cheaper, and some will defer their purchase. Yes, you will save money down the road. But you have to pay the down payment and the taxes now. I agree with the AAM that sales volumes will be decreased. Fewer new car sales means fewer jobs in sales and manufacturing. However, there may be a renaissance in the old car repair industry, as people keep their old beaters longer.C) High CAFE standards will reduce consumer choice. How do you make a pickup truck which can pull a 10,000lb trailer, or haul 2,000lbs of bricks in its bed, which gets close to 60MPG? I don't think it is possible. Batteries are heavy and reduce payload. Beefy suspensions and large engines all work against efficiency. Even with efficiency improvements, in order to be able to sell pickup trucks, the automakers will have to get people to buy smaller cars to offset them. That's how CAFE works. The only way to do this is through price manipulation--either lose money on small cars, or jack up margins in large trucks. Since method one nearly killed the Big 3 once already, I suspect the answer is going to be method two. People who want muscle cars or pickup trucks will have to pay a lot more for them or do without. Instead, there will be strong pressure on consumers to pick small cars and range limited EVs. Products like high-performance sports cars may be very different under a 60MPG regime--slower, more expensive.
If you want to influence consumers directly, and do it in a transparent way, you need to tax fossil fuel. Don't specify a fleet efficiency standard, rather, increase gas taxes slowly until consumers start to respond. You can make it revenue neutral by rebating the taxes, or offsetting somewhere else. But there isn't political will to do that. It's easier to hide behind CAFE.
Eventually, though, people will notice that CAFE is just another tax, just applied in a more complicated, hidden way. Unfortunately, it may be too late, after the industry has changed in drastic ways.
Increase performance and gas mileage with a performance chip. Performance Chips Direct sells ECU chips for trucks and cars.
Tuesday, July 26, 2011
Sunday, July 24, 2011
The Ritchie Boys At Holocaust Memorial Center
One of the Detroit area's hidden gems (well, it isn't that hidden) is the Holocaust Memorial Center. A fascinating, if grim, museum of Holocaust history with stunning architecture.
The HMC debuted a new exhibit this last weekend, about the Ritchie Boys, a unit of soldiers who were trained in intelligence gathering and interrogation techniques at the Army's Fort Ritchie, before being sent to Europe to help with the invasion. Many of the Ritchie Boys were Jews who had German language skills.
I went to the opening and shot a few photos.
Out front, a pair of (Brits!) WWII reenactors set up a very nice mini-camp, featuring a lovingly restored Jeep, as well as some excellent replica Browning machine guns, real Garands, and some token barbed wire.
Some old timers
Paratooper uniform
A few more Jeep photos
If you haven't gone to the Holocaust Memorial Center, I suggest you take half a day and visit. It is pretty heavy, depressing stuff, but it is a good experience.
The MONOTYPE Car
Designer Fernando Ocana has published a Master's of Art project for an urban vehicle he calls MONOFORM. A 3-person compact city car, his design focuses on how the exterior of the vehicle interacts with the view of the city around it, by using various glass planes to reflect images.

As a pure design project, it is pretty neat. As a vehicle, it is of course unworkable. Rear stearing has inherent stability problems at high speed. Driver visibility in this vehicle doesn't look to be good. There doesn't appear to be any suspension travel. And, probably the most severe issue, the aerodynamics of this shape are probably unworkable.
Would anyone want to drive around in something that looks like a phone booth designed by Lockheed Martin stealth engineers having a bad day?
As a pure design project, it is pretty neat. As a vehicle, it is of course unworkable. Rear stearing has inherent stability problems at high speed. Driver visibility in this vehicle doesn't look to be good. There doesn't appear to be any suspension travel. And, probably the most severe issue, the aerodynamics of this shape are probably unworkable.
Would anyone want to drive around in something that looks like a phone booth designed by Lockheed Martin stealth engineers having a bad day?
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What are you looking at? Uh!?
What are you looking at?! (slap)
Are you undressing me with your eyes?
Poor guy…you can't help it?
Is your heart beating? Is your head spinning?
Do you feel lost thinking that I could be yours forever?
(by the way has a slightly non-italian accent)