How does TJ Cruise Control behave?
#61
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: How does TJ Cruise Control behave?
Hi Earle,
Real Jeeps have a hand throttle, stock at number nine at:
http://www.apple.queensu.ca/CJ3B/Pho...nteriorOld.gif
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Earle Horton wrote:
>
> There are lots of hand throttle kits, probably at your local auto parts
> store, but the governor is the tough part.
>
> Earle
Real Jeeps have a hand throttle, stock at number nine at:
http://www.apple.queensu.ca/CJ3B/Pho...nteriorOld.gif
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Earle Horton wrote:
>
> There are lots of hand throttle kits, probably at your local auto parts
> store, but the governor is the tough part.
>
> Earle
#62
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: How does TJ Cruise Control behave?
A Model T was the first motorized vehicle to make it from Silverton, over
Cinnamon Pass, to Lake City. There is a fellow in Silverton, who owns about
ten of them, in varying states of repair and restoration. This includes one
with an original snowmobile kit installed. It has a rear tag axle, a set of
chains that goes over both rear tires on each side, and skis where the front
wheels used to be.
Earle
"L.W. (ßill) ------ III" <----------@***.net> wrote in message
news:434D5693.78984F63@***.net...
> There was no foot accelerator pedal on the Model T Ford, it was
> controlled by a lever on the steering wheel:
>
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...S_interior.jpg
> God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
> mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
>
> Earle Horton wrote:
> >
> > Seriously, many pieces of farm equipment, especially diesels which have
a
> > built in governor, just use a throttle cable for this purpose. On a
tracked
> > vehicle, or a logging skidder, they work really well for rock crawling.
One
> > advantage, is that there is no hitting a bump and unintentionally
mashing
> > your foot on the accelerator pedal, because the equipment that I am
thinking
> > of, doesn't have one.
> >
> > Earle
>
Cinnamon Pass, to Lake City. There is a fellow in Silverton, who owns about
ten of them, in varying states of repair and restoration. This includes one
with an original snowmobile kit installed. It has a rear tag axle, a set of
chains that goes over both rear tires on each side, and skis where the front
wheels used to be.
Earle
"L.W. (ßill) ------ III" <----------@***.net> wrote in message
news:434D5693.78984F63@***.net...
> There was no foot accelerator pedal on the Model T Ford, it was
> controlled by a lever on the steering wheel:
>
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...S_interior.jpg
> God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
> mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
>
> Earle Horton wrote:
> >
> > Seriously, many pieces of farm equipment, especially diesels which have
a
> > built in governor, just use a throttle cable for this purpose. On a
tracked
> > vehicle, or a logging skidder, they work really well for rock crawling.
One
> > advantage, is that there is no hitting a bump and unintentionally
mashing
> > your foot on the accelerator pedal, because the equipment that I am
thinking
> > of, doesn't have one.
> >
> > Earle
>
#63
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: How does TJ Cruise Control behave?
A Model T was the first motorized vehicle to make it from Silverton, over
Cinnamon Pass, to Lake City. There is a fellow in Silverton, who owns about
ten of them, in varying states of repair and restoration. This includes one
with an original snowmobile kit installed. It has a rear tag axle, a set of
chains that goes over both rear tires on each side, and skis where the front
wheels used to be.
Earle
"L.W. (ßill) ------ III" <----------@***.net> wrote in message
news:434D5693.78984F63@***.net...
> There was no foot accelerator pedal on the Model T Ford, it was
> controlled by a lever on the steering wheel:
>
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...S_interior.jpg
> God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
> mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
>
> Earle Horton wrote:
> >
> > Seriously, many pieces of farm equipment, especially diesels which have
a
> > built in governor, just use a throttle cable for this purpose. On a
tracked
> > vehicle, or a logging skidder, they work really well for rock crawling.
One
> > advantage, is that there is no hitting a bump and unintentionally
mashing
> > your foot on the accelerator pedal, because the equipment that I am
thinking
> > of, doesn't have one.
> >
> > Earle
>
Cinnamon Pass, to Lake City. There is a fellow in Silverton, who owns about
ten of them, in varying states of repair and restoration. This includes one
with an original snowmobile kit installed. It has a rear tag axle, a set of
chains that goes over both rear tires on each side, and skis where the front
wheels used to be.
Earle
"L.W. (ßill) ------ III" <----------@***.net> wrote in message
news:434D5693.78984F63@***.net...
> There was no foot accelerator pedal on the Model T Ford, it was
> controlled by a lever on the steering wheel:
>
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...S_interior.jpg
> God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
> mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
>
> Earle Horton wrote:
> >
> > Seriously, many pieces of farm equipment, especially diesels which have
a
> > built in governor, just use a throttle cable for this purpose. On a
tracked
> > vehicle, or a logging skidder, they work really well for rock crawling.
One
> > advantage, is that there is no hitting a bump and unintentionally
mashing
> > your foot on the accelerator pedal, because the equipment that I am
thinking
> > of, doesn't have one.
> >
> > Earle
>
#64
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: How does TJ Cruise Control behave?
A Model T was the first motorized vehicle to make it from Silverton, over
Cinnamon Pass, to Lake City. There is a fellow in Silverton, who owns about
ten of them, in varying states of repair and restoration. This includes one
with an original snowmobile kit installed. It has a rear tag axle, a set of
chains that goes over both rear tires on each side, and skis where the front
wheels used to be.
Earle
"L.W. (ßill) ------ III" <----------@***.net> wrote in message
news:434D5693.78984F63@***.net...
> There was no foot accelerator pedal on the Model T Ford, it was
> controlled by a lever on the steering wheel:
>
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...S_interior.jpg
> God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
> mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
>
> Earle Horton wrote:
> >
> > Seriously, many pieces of farm equipment, especially diesels which have
a
> > built in governor, just use a throttle cable for this purpose. On a
tracked
> > vehicle, or a logging skidder, they work really well for rock crawling.
One
> > advantage, is that there is no hitting a bump and unintentionally
mashing
> > your foot on the accelerator pedal, because the equipment that I am
thinking
> > of, doesn't have one.
> >
> > Earle
>
Cinnamon Pass, to Lake City. There is a fellow in Silverton, who owns about
ten of them, in varying states of repair and restoration. This includes one
with an original snowmobile kit installed. It has a rear tag axle, a set of
chains that goes over both rear tires on each side, and skis where the front
wheels used to be.
Earle
"L.W. (ßill) ------ III" <----------@***.net> wrote in message
news:434D5693.78984F63@***.net...
> There was no foot accelerator pedal on the Model T Ford, it was
> controlled by a lever on the steering wheel:
>
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedi...S_interior.jpg
> God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
> mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
>
> Earle Horton wrote:
> >
> > Seriously, many pieces of farm equipment, especially diesels which have
a
> > built in governor, just use a throttle cable for this purpose. On a
tracked
> > vehicle, or a logging skidder, they work really well for rock crawling.
One
> > advantage, is that there is no hitting a bump and unintentionally
mashing
> > your foot on the accelerator pedal, because the equipment that I am
thinking
> > of, doesn't have one.
> >
> > Earle
>
#65
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: How does TJ Cruise Control behave?
You can get a rock crawling electronic hand throttle for the wrangler, but
it is expensive. I'll dig about and try to remember who makes it. Rubicon
Express did it the old fashioned way with no electronics and something which
looked suspiciously like a bicycle gear lever which attached to the gear
leaver.
Dave Milne, Scotland
'91 Grand Wagoneer, '99 TJ
"FrankW" <fworm@mxznorpak.ca> wrote in message
news:IOKdnRjOmLKIiNDeRVn-qQ@magma.ca...
> Hmmmm???
> How could you get a governor to work on a Jeep?
> A throttle control from a cruise control kit and
> a "brain" to monitor the rpm and try to keep it there.
> Surprized nobody came up with something like that.
>
> Earle Horton wrote:
>
> > There are lots of hand throttle kits, probably at your local auto parts
> > store, but the governor is the tough part.
> >
> > Earle
> >
> > "FrankW" <fworm@mxznorpak.ca> wrote in message
> > news:1fCdnSBxnOCgjdDeRVn-hA@magma.ca...
> >
> >>Yes! A hand throttle and a governor (like a John Deere farm tractor)
> >>that you can engage and disengage when needed would be a
> >>cool option for a Jeep.
> >>Is anything available in the aftermarket world like that?
> >>
> >>Mike Romain wrote:
> >>
> >>>You need a hand throttle for things like that....
> >>>
> >>>Mike
> >>>86/00 CJ7 Laredo, 33x9.5 BFG Muds, 'glass nose to tail in '00
> >>>88 Cherokee 235 BFG AT's
> >>>
> >>>FrankW wrote:
> >>>
> >>>
> >>>>Wow I didn't know they had cruise control for standards.
> >>>>Do they work for rock crawling? Sorta like a governor?
> >>>>
> >>>>bllsht wrote:
> >>>>
> >>>>
> >>>>>Not sure about the new ones, as I haven't checked them. It used to
be
> >
> > that the
> >
> >>>>>system would automatically disengage if it sensed a loss of 10 mph or
> >
> > so.
> >
> >>>>>
> >>>>>In message <1129059905.576087.181040@g44g2000cwa.googlegroups .com>,
> >
> > "Nick
> >
> >>>>>------" wrote:
> >>>>>
> >>>>>
> >>>>>
> >>>>>
> >>>>>>Hi Folks,
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>>Can anyone comment on how cruise control behaves in a manual
> >>>>>>transmission Jeep TJ? Specifically, what happens if you are on a
> >>>>>>incline which requires down shifting. Does the motor stall out or
> >
> > does
> >
> >>>>>>cruise control disengage automatically?
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>>Thanks,
> >>>>>>Nick
> >>
> >>
> >
> >
>
it is expensive. I'll dig about and try to remember who makes it. Rubicon
Express did it the old fashioned way with no electronics and something which
looked suspiciously like a bicycle gear lever which attached to the gear
leaver.
Dave Milne, Scotland
'91 Grand Wagoneer, '99 TJ
"FrankW" <fworm@mxznorpak.ca> wrote in message
news:IOKdnRjOmLKIiNDeRVn-qQ@magma.ca...
> Hmmmm???
> How could you get a governor to work on a Jeep?
> A throttle control from a cruise control kit and
> a "brain" to monitor the rpm and try to keep it there.
> Surprized nobody came up with something like that.
>
> Earle Horton wrote:
>
> > There are lots of hand throttle kits, probably at your local auto parts
> > store, but the governor is the tough part.
> >
> > Earle
> >
> > "FrankW" <fworm@mxznorpak.ca> wrote in message
> > news:1fCdnSBxnOCgjdDeRVn-hA@magma.ca...
> >
> >>Yes! A hand throttle and a governor (like a John Deere farm tractor)
> >>that you can engage and disengage when needed would be a
> >>cool option for a Jeep.
> >>Is anything available in the aftermarket world like that?
> >>
> >>Mike Romain wrote:
> >>
> >>>You need a hand throttle for things like that....
> >>>
> >>>Mike
> >>>86/00 CJ7 Laredo, 33x9.5 BFG Muds, 'glass nose to tail in '00
> >>>88 Cherokee 235 BFG AT's
> >>>
> >>>FrankW wrote:
> >>>
> >>>
> >>>>Wow I didn't know they had cruise control for standards.
> >>>>Do they work for rock crawling? Sorta like a governor?
> >>>>
> >>>>bllsht wrote:
> >>>>
> >>>>
> >>>>>Not sure about the new ones, as I haven't checked them. It used to
be
> >
> > that the
> >
> >>>>>system would automatically disengage if it sensed a loss of 10 mph or
> >
> > so.
> >
> >>>>>
> >>>>>In message <1129059905.576087.181040@g44g2000cwa.googlegroups .com>,
> >
> > "Nick
> >
> >>>>>------" wrote:
> >>>>>
> >>>>>
> >>>>>
> >>>>>
> >>>>>>Hi Folks,
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>>Can anyone comment on how cruise control behaves in a manual
> >>>>>>transmission Jeep TJ? Specifically, what happens if you are on a
> >>>>>>incline which requires down shifting. Does the motor stall out or
> >
> > does
> >
> >>>>>>cruise control disengage automatically?
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>>Thanks,
> >>>>>>Nick
> >>
> >>
> >
> >
>
#66
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: How does TJ Cruise Control behave?
You can get a rock crawling electronic hand throttle for the wrangler, but
it is expensive. I'll dig about and try to remember who makes it. Rubicon
Express did it the old fashioned way with no electronics and something which
looked suspiciously like a bicycle gear lever which attached to the gear
leaver.
Dave Milne, Scotland
'91 Grand Wagoneer, '99 TJ
"FrankW" <fworm@mxznorpak.ca> wrote in message
news:IOKdnRjOmLKIiNDeRVn-qQ@magma.ca...
> Hmmmm???
> How could you get a governor to work on a Jeep?
> A throttle control from a cruise control kit and
> a "brain" to monitor the rpm and try to keep it there.
> Surprized nobody came up with something like that.
>
> Earle Horton wrote:
>
> > There are lots of hand throttle kits, probably at your local auto parts
> > store, but the governor is the tough part.
> >
> > Earle
> >
> > "FrankW" <fworm@mxznorpak.ca> wrote in message
> > news:1fCdnSBxnOCgjdDeRVn-hA@magma.ca...
> >
> >>Yes! A hand throttle and a governor (like a John Deere farm tractor)
> >>that you can engage and disengage when needed would be a
> >>cool option for a Jeep.
> >>Is anything available in the aftermarket world like that?
> >>
> >>Mike Romain wrote:
> >>
> >>>You need a hand throttle for things like that....
> >>>
> >>>Mike
> >>>86/00 CJ7 Laredo, 33x9.5 BFG Muds, 'glass nose to tail in '00
> >>>88 Cherokee 235 BFG AT's
> >>>
> >>>FrankW wrote:
> >>>
> >>>
> >>>>Wow I didn't know they had cruise control for standards.
> >>>>Do they work for rock crawling? Sorta like a governor?
> >>>>
> >>>>bllsht wrote:
> >>>>
> >>>>
> >>>>>Not sure about the new ones, as I haven't checked them. It used to
be
> >
> > that the
> >
> >>>>>system would automatically disengage if it sensed a loss of 10 mph or
> >
> > so.
> >
> >>>>>
> >>>>>In message <1129059905.576087.181040@g44g2000cwa.googlegroups .com>,
> >
> > "Nick
> >
> >>>>>------" wrote:
> >>>>>
> >>>>>
> >>>>>
> >>>>>
> >>>>>>Hi Folks,
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>>Can anyone comment on how cruise control behaves in a manual
> >>>>>>transmission Jeep TJ? Specifically, what happens if you are on a
> >>>>>>incline which requires down shifting. Does the motor stall out or
> >
> > does
> >
> >>>>>>cruise control disengage automatically?
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>>Thanks,
> >>>>>>Nick
> >>
> >>
> >
> >
>
it is expensive. I'll dig about and try to remember who makes it. Rubicon
Express did it the old fashioned way with no electronics and something which
looked suspiciously like a bicycle gear lever which attached to the gear
leaver.
Dave Milne, Scotland
'91 Grand Wagoneer, '99 TJ
"FrankW" <fworm@mxznorpak.ca> wrote in message
news:IOKdnRjOmLKIiNDeRVn-qQ@magma.ca...
> Hmmmm???
> How could you get a governor to work on a Jeep?
> A throttle control from a cruise control kit and
> a "brain" to monitor the rpm and try to keep it there.
> Surprized nobody came up with something like that.
>
> Earle Horton wrote:
>
> > There are lots of hand throttle kits, probably at your local auto parts
> > store, but the governor is the tough part.
> >
> > Earle
> >
> > "FrankW" <fworm@mxznorpak.ca> wrote in message
> > news:1fCdnSBxnOCgjdDeRVn-hA@magma.ca...
> >
> >>Yes! A hand throttle and a governor (like a John Deere farm tractor)
> >>that you can engage and disengage when needed would be a
> >>cool option for a Jeep.
> >>Is anything available in the aftermarket world like that?
> >>
> >>Mike Romain wrote:
> >>
> >>>You need a hand throttle for things like that....
> >>>
> >>>Mike
> >>>86/00 CJ7 Laredo, 33x9.5 BFG Muds, 'glass nose to tail in '00
> >>>88 Cherokee 235 BFG AT's
> >>>
> >>>FrankW wrote:
> >>>
> >>>
> >>>>Wow I didn't know they had cruise control for standards.
> >>>>Do they work for rock crawling? Sorta like a governor?
> >>>>
> >>>>bllsht wrote:
> >>>>
> >>>>
> >>>>>Not sure about the new ones, as I haven't checked them. It used to
be
> >
> > that the
> >
> >>>>>system would automatically disengage if it sensed a loss of 10 mph or
> >
> > so.
> >
> >>>>>
> >>>>>In message <1129059905.576087.181040@g44g2000cwa.googlegroups .com>,
> >
> > "Nick
> >
> >>>>>------" wrote:
> >>>>>
> >>>>>
> >>>>>
> >>>>>
> >>>>>>Hi Folks,
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>>Can anyone comment on how cruise control behaves in a manual
> >>>>>>transmission Jeep TJ? Specifically, what happens if you are on a
> >>>>>>incline which requires down shifting. Does the motor stall out or
> >
> > does
> >
> >>>>>>cruise control disengage automatically?
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>>Thanks,
> >>>>>>Nick
> >>
> >>
> >
> >
>
#67
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: How does TJ Cruise Control behave?
You can get a rock crawling electronic hand throttle for the wrangler, but
it is expensive. I'll dig about and try to remember who makes it. Rubicon
Express did it the old fashioned way with no electronics and something which
looked suspiciously like a bicycle gear lever which attached to the gear
leaver.
Dave Milne, Scotland
'91 Grand Wagoneer, '99 TJ
"FrankW" <fworm@mxznorpak.ca> wrote in message
news:IOKdnRjOmLKIiNDeRVn-qQ@magma.ca...
> Hmmmm???
> How could you get a governor to work on a Jeep?
> A throttle control from a cruise control kit and
> a "brain" to monitor the rpm and try to keep it there.
> Surprized nobody came up with something like that.
>
> Earle Horton wrote:
>
> > There are lots of hand throttle kits, probably at your local auto parts
> > store, but the governor is the tough part.
> >
> > Earle
> >
> > "FrankW" <fworm@mxznorpak.ca> wrote in message
> > news:1fCdnSBxnOCgjdDeRVn-hA@magma.ca...
> >
> >>Yes! A hand throttle and a governor (like a John Deere farm tractor)
> >>that you can engage and disengage when needed would be a
> >>cool option for a Jeep.
> >>Is anything available in the aftermarket world like that?
> >>
> >>Mike Romain wrote:
> >>
> >>>You need a hand throttle for things like that....
> >>>
> >>>Mike
> >>>86/00 CJ7 Laredo, 33x9.5 BFG Muds, 'glass nose to tail in '00
> >>>88 Cherokee 235 BFG AT's
> >>>
> >>>FrankW wrote:
> >>>
> >>>
> >>>>Wow I didn't know they had cruise control for standards.
> >>>>Do they work for rock crawling? Sorta like a governor?
> >>>>
> >>>>bllsht wrote:
> >>>>
> >>>>
> >>>>>Not sure about the new ones, as I haven't checked them. It used to
be
> >
> > that the
> >
> >>>>>system would automatically disengage if it sensed a loss of 10 mph or
> >
> > so.
> >
> >>>>>
> >>>>>In message <1129059905.576087.181040@g44g2000cwa.googlegroups .com>,
> >
> > "Nick
> >
> >>>>>------" wrote:
> >>>>>
> >>>>>
> >>>>>
> >>>>>
> >>>>>>Hi Folks,
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>>Can anyone comment on how cruise control behaves in a manual
> >>>>>>transmission Jeep TJ? Specifically, what happens if you are on a
> >>>>>>incline which requires down shifting. Does the motor stall out or
> >
> > does
> >
> >>>>>>cruise control disengage automatically?
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>>Thanks,
> >>>>>>Nick
> >>
> >>
> >
> >
>
it is expensive. I'll dig about and try to remember who makes it. Rubicon
Express did it the old fashioned way with no electronics and something which
looked suspiciously like a bicycle gear lever which attached to the gear
leaver.
Dave Milne, Scotland
'91 Grand Wagoneer, '99 TJ
"FrankW" <fworm@mxznorpak.ca> wrote in message
news:IOKdnRjOmLKIiNDeRVn-qQ@magma.ca...
> Hmmmm???
> How could you get a governor to work on a Jeep?
> A throttle control from a cruise control kit and
> a "brain" to monitor the rpm and try to keep it there.
> Surprized nobody came up with something like that.
>
> Earle Horton wrote:
>
> > There are lots of hand throttle kits, probably at your local auto parts
> > store, but the governor is the tough part.
> >
> > Earle
> >
> > "FrankW" <fworm@mxznorpak.ca> wrote in message
> > news:1fCdnSBxnOCgjdDeRVn-hA@magma.ca...
> >
> >>Yes! A hand throttle and a governor (like a John Deere farm tractor)
> >>that you can engage and disengage when needed would be a
> >>cool option for a Jeep.
> >>Is anything available in the aftermarket world like that?
> >>
> >>Mike Romain wrote:
> >>
> >>>You need a hand throttle for things like that....
> >>>
> >>>Mike
> >>>86/00 CJ7 Laredo, 33x9.5 BFG Muds, 'glass nose to tail in '00
> >>>88 Cherokee 235 BFG AT's
> >>>
> >>>FrankW wrote:
> >>>
> >>>
> >>>>Wow I didn't know they had cruise control for standards.
> >>>>Do they work for rock crawling? Sorta like a governor?
> >>>>
> >>>>bllsht wrote:
> >>>>
> >>>>
> >>>>>Not sure about the new ones, as I haven't checked them. It used to
be
> >
> > that the
> >
> >>>>>system would automatically disengage if it sensed a loss of 10 mph or
> >
> > so.
> >
> >>>>>
> >>>>>In message <1129059905.576087.181040@g44g2000cwa.googlegroups .com>,
> >
> > "Nick
> >
> >>>>>------" wrote:
> >>>>>
> >>>>>
> >>>>>
> >>>>>
> >>>>>>Hi Folks,
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>>Can anyone comment on how cruise control behaves in a manual
> >>>>>>transmission Jeep TJ? Specifically, what happens if you are on a
> >>>>>>incline which requires down shifting. Does the motor stall out or
> >
> > does
> >
> >>>>>>cruise control disengage automatically?
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>>Thanks,
> >>>>>>Nick
> >>
> >>
> >
> >
>
#68
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: How does TJ Cruise Control behave?
TJ is the only vehicle I've owned which will let you get above 20 going
through the gears without touching the throttle (when cold).
Dave Milne, Scotland
'91 Grand Wagoneer, '99 TJ
"Mike Albanese" <mj_albanese@atlanticXX.net> wrote in message
news:11kq8m83rm9vm0e@corp.supernews.com...
>
> I think the TJ is the only vehicle I've ever owned that won't stall out
> if you let it slowly come to a stop in lower gears without depressing
> the clutch. It just hobbles along without complaining. Great for
> creeping along trails and even in bumper-to-bumper city traffic -- you
> just nudge the throttle every so often to keep it moving along!
through the gears without touching the throttle (when cold).
Dave Milne, Scotland
'91 Grand Wagoneer, '99 TJ
"Mike Albanese" <mj_albanese@atlanticXX.net> wrote in message
news:11kq8m83rm9vm0e@corp.supernews.com...
>
> I think the TJ is the only vehicle I've ever owned that won't stall out
> if you let it slowly come to a stop in lower gears without depressing
> the clutch. It just hobbles along without complaining. Great for
> creeping along trails and even in bumper-to-bumper city traffic -- you
> just nudge the throttle every so often to keep it moving along!
#69
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: How does TJ Cruise Control behave?
TJ is the only vehicle I've owned which will let you get above 20 going
through the gears without touching the throttle (when cold).
Dave Milne, Scotland
'91 Grand Wagoneer, '99 TJ
"Mike Albanese" <mj_albanese@atlanticXX.net> wrote in message
news:11kq8m83rm9vm0e@corp.supernews.com...
>
> I think the TJ is the only vehicle I've ever owned that won't stall out
> if you let it slowly come to a stop in lower gears without depressing
> the clutch. It just hobbles along without complaining. Great for
> creeping along trails and even in bumper-to-bumper city traffic -- you
> just nudge the throttle every so often to keep it moving along!
through the gears without touching the throttle (when cold).
Dave Milne, Scotland
'91 Grand Wagoneer, '99 TJ
"Mike Albanese" <mj_albanese@atlanticXX.net> wrote in message
news:11kq8m83rm9vm0e@corp.supernews.com...
>
> I think the TJ is the only vehicle I've ever owned that won't stall out
> if you let it slowly come to a stop in lower gears without depressing
> the clutch. It just hobbles along without complaining. Great for
> creeping along trails and even in bumper-to-bumper city traffic -- you
> just nudge the throttle every so often to keep it moving along!
#70
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: How does TJ Cruise Control behave?
TJ is the only vehicle I've owned which will let you get above 20 going
through the gears without touching the throttle (when cold).
Dave Milne, Scotland
'91 Grand Wagoneer, '99 TJ
"Mike Albanese" <mj_albanese@atlanticXX.net> wrote in message
news:11kq8m83rm9vm0e@corp.supernews.com...
>
> I think the TJ is the only vehicle I've ever owned that won't stall out
> if you let it slowly come to a stop in lower gears without depressing
> the clutch. It just hobbles along without complaining. Great for
> creeping along trails and even in bumper-to-bumper city traffic -- you
> just nudge the throttle every so often to keep it moving along!
through the gears without touching the throttle (when cold).
Dave Milne, Scotland
'91 Grand Wagoneer, '99 TJ
"Mike Albanese" <mj_albanese@atlanticXX.net> wrote in message
news:11kq8m83rm9vm0e@corp.supernews.com...
>
> I think the TJ is the only vehicle I've ever owned that won't stall out
> if you let it slowly come to a stop in lower gears without depressing
> the clutch. It just hobbles along without complaining. Great for
> creeping along trails and even in bumper-to-bumper city traffic -- you
> just nudge the throttle every so often to keep it moving along!