Cruise Control

Author
Discussion

Racing Greg

Original Poster:

7 posts

253 months

Thursday 27th November 2003
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Has anyone fitted cruise control to their Noble or know of a cruise control system that can be adapted to the Noble?

nick francis

858 posts

268 months

Thursday 27th November 2003
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why for f$$ks sake would you want cruise control?

in fact, with a speed restriction of 55 mph why would any one wanto bother taking a Noble to the States


agent006

12,058 posts

271 months

Thursday 27th November 2003
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nick francis said:
why for f$$ks sake would you want cruise control?

in fact, with a speed restriction of 55 mph why would any one wanto bother taking a Noble to the States




To use on a track?

With a speedlimit of 70mph, why would any one want to bother buying a noble in the UK?

nick francis

858 posts

268 months

Thursday 27th November 2003
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apart from track use in uk its easy to get the car over the water to those unrestricteed roads in europe

cruise control in a noble.. believe me you wouldnt want it

nick francis

858 posts

268 months

Thursday 27th November 2003
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Agent 006

dont feed the trolls! if they think cruise control on track will be useful then lets just let them..

I did hear that Lee's developing an Automatic GTO 3 with ABS and dual control aimed at the BSM driving school market

SpeedDemon

55 posts

253 months

Thursday 27th November 2003
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Most highways I've been on in the US, at least in California, are 65mph, with the "speed of traffic" generally around 75-80mph (assuming the traffic isn't congested!)

Of course, one can always take a 30-45 minute drive and get out to the desert roads. Imagine a road in the middle of the desert that is flat and straight for many miles, with perfect visibility and no intersections/onramps. Great stuff for top-speed testing, or cruising well beyond 100mph.

[/sarcasm on] But I'm sure you have plenty of desert areas and roads like this in the UK, or what would be the point in buying a Noble there, right? [/sarcasm off]

Actually, I think you have it all wrong. I don't think cruising speeds on a freeway when I think about a Noble, I think about access to lots of uninterrupted twisting roads that throw a variety of turns at you. Handling is what it's all about...

Best,
Marc

Racing Greg

Original Poster:

7 posts

253 months

Saturday 29th November 2003
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nick francis said:
why for f$$ks sake would you want cruise control?

in fact, with a speed restriction of 55 mph why would any one wanto bother taking a Noble to the States


Racing Greg

Original Poster:

7 posts

253 months

Saturday 29th November 2003
quotequote all
[quote=nick francis]why for f$$ks sake would you want cruise control?

in fact, with a speed restriction of 55 mph why would any one wanto bother taking a Noble to the States


Why cruise control? a client wants to pay me to install it, assuming a suitable system could be procured. This guy wants to drive long distances( something that does not really exist in the UK) with the car. For 8 to 10 hour trips, it might be a nice option to have.

agent006

12,058 posts

271 months

Saturday 29th November 2003
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nick francis said:
Agent 006 dont feed the trolls!


Why is this guy a troll? His other post(s) seem decent enough.

joust

14,622 posts

266 months

Sunday 30th November 2003
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For long distances I do prefer cruise control, and also use it a lot in the X5 even on "short" journies on motorways and dual carriageways. I also use it to ensure that I don't exceed the speed limit through things like roadworks.

I'd probably add it to the Noble if it was a "fully integrated" unit and didn't look like a "bolt on" - but then I quite often use the Noble to pootle around the M25 where it's a lot less stressful to set the speed to the variable speed limit using crusie control and pootle around without a "care in the world"!

J

Racing Greg

Original Poster:

7 posts

253 months

Sunday 30th November 2003
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joust said:
For long distances I do prefer cruise control, and also use it a lot in the X5 even on "short" journies on motorways and dual carriageways. I also use it to ensure that I don't exceed the speed limit through things like roadworks.

I'd probably add it to the Noble if it was a "fully integrated" unit and didn't look like a "bolt on" - but then I quite often use the Noble to pootle around the M25 where it's a lot less stressful to set the speed to the variable speed limit using crusie control and pootle around without a "care in the world"!

J
You have hit on the real problem. Finding a system that would be easily (and inexpensive) and properly integrated with the car's electronics. I am not sure their is a solution. I will give the client my best effort.

sidekick

266 posts

258 months

Monday 1st December 2003
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The major problem I would have thought with cruise control in a Noble is where to put your feet when the cruise is switched on

agent006

12,058 posts

271 months

Monday 1st December 2003
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Would a Ford system be a good place to start because of the engine, or am i being too simplistic?

Alfa Dave

950 posts

291 months

Tuesday 2nd December 2003
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I don't see any reason why you couldn't do this. The Mondeo system is fairly simple. It has an electric motor (located under the cowl) operating a cable to open the throttle, controled by the switches on the steering wheel. You would of course have to alter the Momo wheel to add the controls, modify the wiring loom to support the power supply required by the motor, modify the throttle bracket to accept the cable and get a cable made up to the correct length.

Any warranty would I would expect go out of the window.

As I said there's no reason that you couldn't do this but I personally would doubt that it's worth the effort....

Racing Greg

Original Poster:

7 posts

253 months

Wednesday 3rd December 2003
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Alfa Dave said:
I don't see any reason why you couldn't do this. The Mondeo system is fairly simple. It has an electric motor (located under the cowl) operating a cable to open the throttle, controled by the switches on the steering wheel. You would of course have to alter the Momo wheel to add the controls, modify the wiring loom to support the power supply required by the motor, modify the throttle bracket to accept the cable and get a cable made up to the correct length.

Any warranty would I would expect go out of the window.

As I said there's no reason that you couldn't do this but I personally would doubt that it's worth the effort....
Dave, I think you are on to something here. The mechanicals would be easy enough to do. The electronics would be a bit tricky. The real question is my customer willing to spend the money required to do it.

cptsideways

13,648 posts

259 months

Thursday 4th December 2003
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The DIY ones are really simple & very effective, I have one that has been exchanged between several of my cars. It dead simple even for me to fit & usually I find a neat place to put it so it looks standard.

Great if your on the phone all day..... (I'm ducking for cover already)