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Jon Wehrenberg
10-27-2009, 09:29 PM
Ed (Sawdust) asked me to relay this message because he is unable to get on the internet.

He had an incident today in which his cruise control would not disengage with application of his brakes.

I will not go into a technical discussion of the circuits since I have not looked to see what may have caused this, although Ed apparently has determined it is a relay relating to the ABS. What is important is that you all know your cruise control may not disengage when you apply your brakes.

When you are on cruise, and you apply your brakes, the red brake annunciator light on the dash lights and simultaneouls with that the cruise control disengages. Today Ed had to make a rapid stop and his cruise control did not disengage, nor did the red light on the dash light.

In his case he was unable to stop where he needed to, but fortunately nothing bad happened as a result.

He did indicate that at around 35 miles an hour his cruise did disengage.

I would urge all to be aware that the cruise control circuit like all mechanical things can have failures. This is a case where a failure can have dire consequences. I have experienced a similar event in the past, and ever since then have never relied on my braking to disengage my cruise. I would urge all others to manually disengage the cruise control any time traffic is heavy, any time a stop is anticipated such as when coming to a rest area, or an exit ramp, or when on curvy narrow roads where visibility is limited.

The cruise control can be disengaged using the brake, the square white button, or the cruise control switch. Ed will post more details and I will attempt to verify which likely component failure can cause this problem, but regardless of what causes it, you as a driver should be prepared to manually disengage your cruise control as your primary means rather than relying on braking to do it for you.

At the very least please recognize if the red brake annunciator does not light when the brakes are applied and the cruise is engaged, it means the cruise has likely not disengaged and you may not be able to stop as planned. While you are applying maximum braking effort, your cruise control is applying maximum horsepower in an attempt to maintain the set speed.

HarborBus
10-27-2009, 09:49 PM
That's pretty scary, thanks for the heads up and we'll look forward to Ed's update and possible preventive measures that can be taken..

phorner
10-27-2009, 09:59 PM
Good info to have. Glad to hear that there was no serious outcome to this episode.

Would hitting the "Decel" button resolve this problem?

GDeen
10-27-2009, 10:16 PM
Seems like this has been discussed as a problem before??:confused:

flyu2there
10-27-2009, 10:16 PM
http://www.boston.com/video/viral_page/?/services/player/bcpid1185143625&bctid=17735942001


Jon,

The above link is some training underway in a bus simulator. I really don't know if there are any available to the public at large but I certainly see a benefit. The airlines have used them for years, they also used for ships and other large equipment. Emergencies of all kinds can be demonstrated and practiced.......... While simulators cannot prepare one for every eventuality things like front tire blow outs at 75 mph certainly can demonstrated and trained.

I have no idea what actually happened to Sawdust, however we should all learn from this incident. A little initial or recurrent training, at least in the mind, really is a requirement. Personally I have attached little stick on goodies to both my jake brake and my cruise control...one has one bump, the other has two. The logic behind that is that I do not have to look at the switches, I have learned them by feel. I recently read of a gentleman who had a stuck wide open throttle on his car, he did nothing and ran into someone else causing serious injury. Did it ever enter his mind to put the car into neutral....no it did not. Turning off the ignition would also have been an alternative, just enough to stop the engine then back on to avoid the steering column lock up....instead he drove right into the car in front of him.

While the mechanical aspect of what went wrong is very important, I feel it equally important to review what we would do in the same situation.

Jon Wehrenberg
10-28-2009, 08:09 AM
I'm glad to see John's post because as a pilot we do train for unanticipated events such as failures of controls or devices that require quick and correct intervention.

When my cruise did not disengage with brake application many moons ago, I had no immediate pressure to get the coach stopped, so the brain fart we all experience when faced with an unexpected problem that requires attention NOW did not occur. I was able to play to see if the brakes would disengage the cruise (they would not), and then I tried the white button (it would not), so I just turned off the switch which did disengage the cruise.

The next time I used the cruise it worked fine, but from that experience I developed the habit of never expecting the brake to disengage the cruise. My practice now is to disengage it with the white button ahead of when I anticipate slowing or stopping and I never use it when I can anticipate I will have to slow down frequently. That might explain in part my 62.5 MPH speeds.

I have found some side benefits to operating the cruise as I do. John mentions being able to identify switches by touch. Since I am always using the white button or the rocker switches to control the cruise I no longer have to even look down. My hand goes to the exact button I intend to operate and there is no conscious thought involved. That's a good thing because I can react correctly without thinking and being delayed by the brain fart. (Trust me, at the first signs of an abnormal situation that requires your immediate attention your brain goes blank while it tries to process what is happening. That is why John's mention of training is so critical.)

Perhaps today we can identify and verify the cause. That is a secondary consideration because when you need to stop and the cruise does not disengage you will not be thinking about changing relays. You will be looking at the car ahead or the stop sign getting very close very fast.

Larry W
10-28-2009, 09:57 AM
I think that if touching the brakes does not cancel the cruise the white button won't cancel the cruise. I have not looked at he wiring diagrams yet, but when the white button is pushed the red light on the dash comes on just like it does when the brakes are applied. I think most of you have the right answer to cancelling the cruise. Turn it off. I guess if that does not work turning of the key would be the last resort.

Coloradobus
10-28-2009, 10:07 AM
Larry,

I would be suspect of your brake switch which a round silver part with 2 wires attached under the driver's seat in the lower compartment. It has a 4 psi air pressure useage where it is screwed into place. The cruise disconnect is tied into the brake light engagement. Check to see if you have brake lights when this happens. Do your brake light indicator light on the dash light? If it doesn't, that's you culprit. They are 38 dollars at Prevost. The H3-45's have 2. Also if your brake lights stick 'ON" after hitting the brake pedal, especially in cooler weather, its the brake light switch sticking.
We had same problem bringing the Beaver home. Cruise would not disengage, no brake lights with foot pedal. Replacement of the switch, all is well.

tdelorme
10-28-2009, 02:27 PM
I'm glad to get this info before it happened to me. Of course being the cool headed dude that I am I'm sure it would have not been an issue. Cleaning up the seat might have been a problem for Jan though, so it's good to know.
My father in law was with me one day when a dog ran out in front of us. I did nothing but get the standard death grip on the wheel as I hit the animal. He gave me an interesting talk on how to avoid becoming "object struck" in those kind of situations. The main thing I remember him saying was to be aware that action was needed and not to freeze, do something effective. He was an old Marine Pilot whose pilot's license was signed by Orval Wright.

LA-HODAG
10-28-2009, 03:06 PM
I had the same experience as Coloradobus after having some service done. Connector from the switch to the brake light circuit had gotten disconnected. No brake lights, no cruise cancellation. And pressing the square white button did not work to cancel either. I had to turn off the main cruise control switch. It's scary when stuff like that happens. Now I always test the disengage function at the start of a trip.

dale farley
10-28-2009, 05:54 PM
Ted, I think you took the right evasive action with the dog. Holding steady in the bus is probably much better than trying to swerve to miss a small animal. Although, I feel sorry for the dog, that is much better than you and Jan going in the ditch, hitting a tree or another vehicle.

truk4u
10-28-2009, 08:36 PM
OK boys, explain this.... The white button does cancel the cruise on mine, but does NOT light up the red brake light on the dash or turn on the rear brake lights. Yes, the dash light works when using the foot brake.

On the other buses, I always used the little white button after hooking up the toad to check brake lights instead of using the pedal.

sawdust_128
10-28-2009, 09:16 PM
Thanks Jon for getting the word out.

Here are the details.

I was on the I30 headed for the I40 in Texas. We needed to make a stop and the ramp was coming up. I was running with cruise control set at 64 mph. I began braking and started toward the exit ramp. About 200 feet into the exit, I first noticed something was not right. I had the sensation that the brakes had "faded" and were not holding properly. I had only a short distance to the crossing traffic area and a stop light.

At this point, I unbuckled my seat belt and was standing on the brake At about 35 mph I knew I would get the coach stopped but I did not get it stopped before I was in the first lane of the intersection.:eek: Luckily, no one approaching.

After the stop, I began testing different things with the coach. That is when I detected that the stop light on the dash was not coming on with the brake. Further investigation confirmed that this failure was allowing the cruise control to remain engaged and there were no stopping lights on the coach or toad. The fading sensation was the result of my braking and the cruise control accelerating.

After discovering the extent of this condition, I stopped again and started looking at the relay sets. (O.K. O.K. so first I sat and whined "Why me?" and scratched my head for a while, and then went to lunch and thought about it.) Then I started looking at the relays. I only handled one. R49 ABS Brake Relay. I pulled it, wiped down the contacts with my fingers, respreading the dielectric grease and re-inserted the relay. It has worked fine since.

In regards to some of the other comments:

Right after I took possession of my coach, the disengage button (square white) for the cruise control stopped functioning. I replaced it. I did some testing of that failed switch and my initial conclusion was that if the light bulb in the switch fails, the switch fails to function. Now I won't swear to this, because all I did was some quick and dirty testing, nothing exhaustive or complete.

As a result of this event, My DDE has a new new category of stopping events entitled "You're shittin' me!" :D

I haven't completely digested this one. But I am thinking that a hard stopping routine has to now include a smack at the disengage button or the on/off for the cruise control.

I hope you all avoid this. I am not done with this one and I will be replacing the relay.
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Coloradobus
10-29-2009, 12:50 AM
Sawdust, We did the relay pulling and the such after our Auto-Cruise experience. Even swapped relays around and called TRUK4U in a panic since we were treating our new coach as an alien! Shame on us.
Anyway, with no brake indicator on the dash and of course no brake lights, and checking all relays and breakers, we were stumped. For we did have brake lights when the Jake came on. You could see the glow in camera after dark. So, the lights worked one way.
Upon arrival home with the Beaver Coach #34, recollecting past experiences with other coaches, a few quick bangs to head with the RV Bay wall, enlightenment!!! Brake Switch failure. We've had brake lights stick on in cold weather as well, causing the brake lights to remain lit.
For 38 dollars and 2 wires and a wrench, replace it, even just for piece of mind,.:cool: you will know its new.

sawdust_128
10-29-2009, 11:30 AM
Why did the brake switch fail? Corrrosion, Normal age-related failure, damage, unknown?

Coloradobus
10-29-2009, 01:00 PM
Who knows why it failed, or why the other coach's switch stuck on when it was cold. Since this switch operates with a bit of air,(4psi) maybe small amount of moisture corroded it. Afterall, this current coach is 17 years old and it has sat indoors for most of its life, and things age. Our other coach was 10 years old, so it maybe age related.
Simple fix and comparatively cheep in the scheme of Prevost parts..

Ray Davis
10-30-2009, 06:33 PM
One thing I have found interesting in these posts is the mention of the "white switch". Maybe this is an XL thing? My coach (and previous) has Prevo rocker switches for all the cruise control stuff. No white switch anywhere.

My CC had CC supplied switches, so I don't believe it's standard in any way!

Ray

Jon Wehrenberg
10-30-2009, 06:47 PM
On both my XL coaches in between the cruise control rocker switch to set the speed and the rocker switch to resume speed was a square white push button momentary contact switch, that when pressed disengaged the cruise control and simultaneously lit the red "brake" annunciator on the dash.

I thought everyone had those switches in addition to the main cruise control on-off switch.

MangoMike
10-30-2009, 06:54 PM
Jon,

In the Marathon there is a "Decel" rocker switch that matches the others. Works the same and is spring loaded.

Really doesn't stand out like the white square one on the Liberty.

HarborBus
10-30-2009, 07:00 PM
I'm with Ray, I don't have a white switch either. I just have the four rocker switches. On/Off, Set, Resume, Decel. That's it, no white switch, must be a Liberty thing:D.

Coloradobus
10-30-2009, 07:19 PM
Ray, Elliott,

Your DECEL button acts the same as the XL factory square momentary button everyone is talking about.. When we bought the Beaver, we were puzzled by the white button until we read the manual.

Ray Davis
10-30-2009, 07:42 PM
Thanks Jim, I figured it was the same, BUT I was puzzled that everyone seemed to know what "the white button" was .... :D

Larry W
10-30-2009, 09:46 PM
Our Royale has the white switch.

Kenneth Brewer
10-30-2009, 10:13 PM
Have yet to see an H3 that has that white switch. I surmised this was an XL thing.

sawdust_128
10-30-2009, 11:48 PM
Ken:

My H3 has a white square decel button.

JIM CHALOUPKA
10-31-2009, 08:22 AM
Another switche/s to get familiar with and practice a dry run with (just locate them and know where they are, like the keys of a musical instrument or keyboard) are the "ENGINE OVER RIDE" switches.

When you see the dreaded warning announced you need to know what to do and RIGHT NOW.


JIM

JIM CHALOUPKA
10-31-2009, 08:42 AM
Here is a picture of the four switch configuration as found on my Liberty, I like it.
As circumstances require I can play them without looking, just like the keys on a musical instrument.

(to describe them:eek:) well, the first row below the trans. selector and the on off is the top row center as you view the picture) :D



JIM:)

phorner
10-31-2009, 09:05 AM
Wow, Jim.... that sure looks familiar!!:D

phorner
10-31-2009, 09:16 AM
The picture of Jims console brings up a question that I had forgotten about.

During our travels this summer I had an "opportunity" to drive the bus after dark for the very first time.

I immediately took notice that my transmission controls did not light up when I switched the headlights on. Everything else in the console looked good....just not the transmission control buttons.

I'm sure that there is a light bulb(s) that need replacement. Is it simply a matter of removing the trim plate around the transmission shift controls to get to them?

Any suggestions (besides just don't drive after dark any more :p) ?

Jon Wehrenberg
10-31-2009, 02:24 PM
I don't think the buttons in my selector pad for the transmission light up, but the diplay does and it shows gear selected, the gear I am in, and mode if that has been selected.