Arrogance. That's why these problems exist. Just like the computer you're using now. The computers (programmers) think they are smarter than the user.
When I press a button, I expect it to take that action, not pause or refuse because it thought it was time to check for automatic windows updates or something stupid
Same with cars. Brakes should stop you, accelerators should make it go. Every time. Every single time. Every single friggin' time!
I have Toyota 4Runner from 2004. Brakes are fine, accelerator doesn't stick. But the thing that bugged me from the beginning is the traction control. If your tires slip, it
takes over.
It doesn't just "transfer power from the wheels that slip to the wheels that grip" (as the slogan goes), it takes over your engine and locks out the accelerator. I call it "dead stick."
Pulling out uphill in snow from a side road to cross a couple lanes of traffic and hitting the bit of slush piled up between lanes yields and instant 5mph crawl and no gas pedal. Slam it a few times, no-go. A little spin and it would have cleared the slush and crossed the road. Good thing no accident there.
I've suggested a "driver first" override system. If the gas pedal is pushed more than 75% twice in under 3 seconds, return accelerator control to the driver. Reset in 15 secs. But it hasn't happened yet. Simple.
This will be the next Toyota (and others surely) problem, IMHO.
The brakes could have the same kind of override. If the brakes are pressed more than 75% in under 3 seconds AND the accelerator (TPS) is over 50%, on the third press, flash a dash light and put throttle into "limp mode" until the vehicle is restarted.
Of course, with all the ABS, many people have no idea what "pumping the brakes" means
- JC
PS- a switch can disable the traction control on the 4Runner, overriding the computer. It isn't factory, but splicing the right wire does it. If anyone wants to know more about it, let me know.