Miata Mailing List: October 1999, Message #183
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| From: | Keith Hearn <khearn@Legato.COM> |
| Subject: | Re: Flashing stop light NMC |
| Date: | Fri, 1 Oct 1999 19:44:11 -0400 |
In message <199910012304.QAA06540@hawk.prod.itd.earthlink.net>, Lanny Chambers
writes:
> On 10/1/99 16:03, Keith Hearn khearn@Legato.COM wrote:
>
> >There may also be better strategies than a timer since last brake
> > release for deciding whether or not to blink on any given
> > application of the brakes.
>
> How about this: flash briefly but very rapidly--say, 4 times in one
> second--but ONLY when the braking system fluid pressure exceeds whatever
> it takes to decelerate at 0.5G (exact figure open for debate...hopefully
> somewhere off this list!). After one second the flashing stops in favor
> of a solid light...or perhaps stays flashing if braking exceeds 0.75G.
> Whatever.
>
> This requires no rocket science. In the '50s, Fords used pressure
> switches instead of mechanical pedal switches to actuate the brake
> lights, and ours surely weren't rockets! I presume they stopped using wet
> switches because they became more expensive and less reliable than dry
> ones.
No offense intended, but Yuck! I'd rather program a microcontroller to
do it based on input from a mercury switch instead of muck about with
adding a pressure switch to my brake system.
But that's just me, speaking from a computer geek point of view. :)
Actually, I think if you're keying off of decceleration, you wouldn't
really need the timer. You'd have the blinker whenever you are braking
hard, which wouldn't be long. One G is about 20mph per second, and is
also about what a Miata is capable of doing when braking. That'd only
be 3 seconds to go from 60 to 0. Half a G is about 10mph per
second, so 60 to 0 would only be 6 seconds.
I think I'll hook up my G-Tech for a few days and see what kind of
decceleration I typically do in various circumstances and try to come
up with a line between "normal" and "hard" braking.
Keith Hearn
'99 10AE "Sexy Sadie" the Sapphire Shark
Milpitas, CA