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TerraHertz | 10 years ago

I'm a retired electronics design engineer and embedded programmer, and I will NEVER own a car with any kind of vehicle/engine management computer. Old cars for me, forever. I flatly refuse anything but fully manual and direct mechanical gears, clutch, steering, brakes and throttle.

Curiously the chief engineer I knew at a major car service center, also felt the same way.

And that's not even touching on the insanity of building computerized vehicle systems with always-on GSM data links to the Net. Ask Michael Hastings how that worked out for him.

Also I agree that critical systems software should be legally required to be open source.

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darkr|10 years ago

Though I have a strong preference for analog/physical/mechanical systems in cars, the main reason for this is more that they're far easier and more fun to work on, rather than reasons of safety.

I'd hazard a guess that in a serious crash you're going to have a far better chance of survival in a modern car (crumple zones, airbags/side-cushions/curtains, ABS etc) vs a ~1980's or older car, and that the cause of said crash would be human error rather than a bug in the engine throttle code.

w0utert|10 years ago

I drive a 25 year old car that perfectly fits your description, but that's just because I like the way it handles, how it looks, and because it has a little more personality to it than all the dime-a-dozen cars you see on every corner of the street.

What I don't understand is how you can rationalize your preferences by thinking these old cars are safer because they don't have any software-defined points of failure. The chances of dying in a car accident because of driver error (by yourself, or by someone else) or mechanical failure (because of worn-out parts) are infinitely higher than by some kind of electronic failure. And if you end up in crash, your chance of survival will be much higher in a modern car, because of all the safety measures that have been added over the years. So IMO it doesn't make sense to stick with the things you've mentioned if safety is your primary concern.

tonylemesmer|10 years ago

he / she didn't mention safety.

kozak|10 years ago

Do you fly airplanes of commercial airlines? If yes, I have bad news for you. They are almost all fly-by-wire already.

drbawb|10 years ago

They're also all triply redundant control systems with rad hardened computers and error correcting memory... you won't find that level of redundancy in passenger cars; and Toyota outright lied to NASA about the type of memory that was used in the 2005 Camry. (Claiming it to be ECC when it was not.)

On top of that: pilots of any caliber undergo far more rigorous training than what is required of a licensed driver in the US. They routinely have to train for the autopilot systems they use, etc. -- I trust a pilot to react appropriately when the fly-by-wire system goes haywire moreso than the average driver.

The automotive industry has quite a ways to go before I'll consider their safety critical engineering to be anywhere near the level of robustness present on even the oldest commercial airliners in service.

ck2|10 years ago

Same here, I drive the last year of the car model with mechanical steering and accelerator, on purpose.

It's really hard to find cars with curtain airbags though without electronic accelerator and fake steering.

drbawb|10 years ago

When you say fake steering do you mean power steering, or electronic assisted power steering?

Because the way I see it power steering itself is just as mechanical as hydraulic brakes; and electronic steering is a far more recent development than throttle-by-wire.

If you're willing to accept power steering it's not too hard to find vehicles w/ side curtain airbags. Lots of '01 Toyotas had side curtain airbags, and it wasn't until '02 that they started putting drive-by-wire in the Lexus lineup (much later for the rest of their lineup, I believe it was phased in over '03-'05 for Toyotas.)

I adore my '01 Camry. The 5S-FE is a bit sluggish compared to modern powertrains, but its bulletproof, insanely easy to work on, and drives quite smoothly. It'll be a cold day in hell when I have to replace that car with a glorified playstation controller.

RealityVoid|10 years ago

That stance will soon become unreasonable. Incidentally, I'm also an engineer and work on embedded systems... for cars. Can embedded systems be unsafe? Sure. Can they be made reasonably safe, safer than full mechanical cars? They can.

It'll come at a point when those cars will be unmaintainable, hard to aquire, expensive. I want to see if you'll still have the sae stance then. What if in 30 years it becomes illegal to drive your own car and can only use SDC's, will you still pine over the good old mechanica components then?

wodenokoto|10 years ago

You feel the same about planes?

snowwrestler|10 years ago

The flight-critical software in planes is at least somewhat reviewed and regulated by the FAA and other national aviation agencies. AFAIK, software in cars is totally unregulated.

rl3|10 years ago

>And that's not even touching on the insanity of building computerized vehicle systems with always-on GSM data links to the Net. Ask Michael Hastings how that worked out for him.

Thing is, if attackers that advanced are out to get you, you're pretty much screwed regardless.

Had Hastings been driving a classic car, I'm sure he would have suffered a tragic drug overdose or something instead.

Besides, even if your car isn't computerized, there's plenty of others on the road with you that are.

luckystarr|10 years ago

Agree. What about power steering? You won't get any car without nowadays. Do you count non-computerized (servo) power-steering as "mechanical steering"?

TerraHertz|10 years ago

I don't think you'd be able to get any new non-computerized car at all today. Emission control makes computerization an absolute requirement. That's why choice in cars for people who feel the way I do is limited to old cars from pre-90s. Suits me fine.

Servo power steering is acceptable, though my present car (1993 Subaru stationwaggon) has direct steering, and I prefer that.

pjc50|10 years ago

I see your point, although I'd find it too limiting to impose that on myself. Speaking of GSM data links, I seem to be the only person worried about the "eCall" mandate: all cars in the EU will be required to phone home with their location in the event of a crash. That requires a GPS+GSM device in the car.

benihana|10 years ago

I love the absurdity of this and arbitrariness. You'll happily drive in a car, one of the most dangerous machines people use regularly. But if it has a computer in it, no siree, that's when things get too deadly to deal with. All of the other thousands of moving parts, like the thing that takes energy-dense hydrocarbons and ignites them several thousand times a second in hot, high pressure tubes - that's fine and totally safe. It's the ECU that makes the car dangerous. The fact that the only thing separating you walking on the sidewalk from death from a two ton metal box is the convention that we'll all stay within the lines painted on the ground. That's fine. It's the ECU that you're afraid of. Absurd.

tinco|10 years ago

You make it seem silly. But the energy-dense hydrocarbons get combusted in steel/aluminium enclosures that have been battle tested in millions of systems for over 60 years. For it to go wrong billions of atoms need to be displaced at huge energies (much higher than the single combustion).

The ECU however, was probably made ~10 years ago by a team of highly incompetent software developers trained as electronics engineers, with no access to any previous attempts by other companies and progressively getting worse over time (instead of being perfected). To make the ECU do something it wasn't made to do all it needs is a mere low voltage event just enough to flip a crucial bit, and many bits are crucial.

Not that I don't agree that it's silly to not drive cars with an ECU, but just saying that his point has merit.

Spooky23|10 years ago

It's not absurd at all. For the questionable benefit of the ECU, you get a black box system that may or may not be garbage controlling the primary engine input, that may or may not fail safe. Give me the thing that grandpa designed 75 years ago.

In the olden times, the throttle was controlled by a mechanical device and tensioned springs. The failure characteristics were studied for 150+ years, and the state of the mechanical components could be assessed by visual or physical inspection. The failure scenarios for open throttle are also non-obvious things to workaround. What do you do? Pump the brake? Take the car out of gear? Depress the accelerator to reset? Turn the key? It's a complex decision matrix with life-and-death consequences, and the correct answer will vary by car configuration and vendor.

The ridiculous positions taken by posters here are indicative of how engineering fail like this happens.

dmschulman|10 years ago

You could easily extrapolate this argument to the Internet of Things if you need a way to understand the poster's point differently. Do you want or even really need a toaster with a computer in it? A refrigerator with a computer in it?

Analog toaster and refrigerator technology has been working quite well for us for almost a century.