Nliiitend1
Member
The MS3 is drive-by-wire. There is no physical connection between the accelerator pedal and the throttle plate.
The MS3 is drive-by-wire. There is no physical connection between the accelerator pedal and the throttle plate.
I wonder if someone with dashhawk can post engine load numbers from having the AC on, off, auto climate on/off and various vent positions and settings.
Hit the auto button, it handles everything automatically. But you can then manually select the fan speed and/or vent pattern and the temperature remains auto, as far as I can tell. I ran that way all last summer and winter and didn't notice it freezing or boiling me.
once you adjust anything then it comes off the auto setting. At that point you are simply adjusting your heat range as though you are in a car without climate control. There are no individual auto adjustments.
once you adjust anything then it comes off the auto setting. At that point you are simply adjusting your heat range as though you are in a car without climate control. There are no individual auto adjustments.
This is incorrect.
Once you adjust something manually, only the thing you adjust becomes manually controlled. Each setting gets "unautomated" separately. If you adjust everything manually, then everything gets put into "manual" mode, but if you adjust say, only the fan speed, then the temp, vent settings, and recirc mode on/off stay in auto mode.
You're misunderstanding the manual...
Quoted from the manual (referring to the AUTO indicator light):
"When off, it indicates the operation of other switches such as the mode selector switch, fan control dial, A/C switch and windshield defroster switch. Other functions will continue to operate automatically."
Yeah I just tested this on a 20 minute drive. I hit Auto, that of course turned on the AC and defrost, fan up to level 3. Then I changed the vents to Middle/Floor, and hit the A/C button to turn it off. That of course turned the Auto light off. As I drove and the car warmed up, the fan by itself went down to level 2, then level 1 after 15 min or so.
So basically the Auto light is only lit when all the climate control is automatic.
You know, you don't have to go through the complication of logging test drives and interpolating the data.
How about just having the car running, parked, and listen for the compressor to kick in while observing the controls? Enlist the help of a friend, if necessary.
Your saying that when you hit Auto the load was 2% higher or when you just turn on the A/C at low speed?