Conrad 16.5
Banned
- :
- 2016.5 CX-5 GT AWD titanium/black 2016 Miata Club ST MT white
As to the brake noise, did you put the car away with the brakes wet?He's a follow-up to my OP:
To recap, I decided to just disconnect the battery (2 year old OEM), fill the tank to minimize the chance of condensation, and pumped the tires to 36 lbs. The vehicle was kept in an unheated garage in the cold north for all of Feb. and March if that matters.
Results:
- Reconnected the battery and it cranked just a tad slowly and stared right up. After driving 15 miles the start-up is back to normal with some battery recharge.
- I was surprised to see that my radio pre-sets and bluetooth setup were saved. The clock had to be reset, however.
- The tires lost 1/2 lb. at most with no detectable flat spots.
- On an initial 15 mile drive, the brakes started out sounding like like sh*t. The scratching / grinding sound is expected until rotor corrosion is worked off. What I did not expect was the whumpeta-whumpeta from the rear when braking. After a few hard stops there was noticeable improvement, then better from there, and now back to normal on the second short drive. Caliper sticking then unstuck with use? Self-adjustments made? Dunno, don't care at this point.
- I continue to maintain that claims of the PCM adjusting to driving habits are way overblown. The engine and transmission sound / feel / shift just as I had left it. The only other possible explanations are 1) the adjustment codes are stored in non-volatile memory (as with the PCM and evidently the radio presets) or 2) I've been driving to the Mazda engineers' benchmarks all along.
If it's the former, disconnecting / reconnecting the battery will not fix any performance issue if one was of a mind to try it. And I doubt it's the latter.