well the title sums it up, anyone ever done a cruise control ?
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Cruise control, anyone ever put one in?
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There are articles listed in the Advanced Search. Be sure to put double quotes around "cruise control". As for myself, the reason I never completed my cruise install is because the twin carb setup only has room for one cable pull. I cannot remember which import had a twin cable (throttle + cruise) box into one cable.
When I find it again, I will complete my install without fail.Last edited by bravekozak; 11-24-2012, 08:29 PM.
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Has anyone found another kit? I don't think you can find the kit that king fish found. At least not easily. Is there a universal kit you can still buy that will work?-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Nancy- 1.8L BP, aspire swap, g-trans
The Adventures of Nancy! Build Thread
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That kit is obsolete. I had to piece it together from many random places.
I would get a newer kit, many are available.
And no, you do not need to have the tach cluster to use the tach signal to drive the CC. In the driver side rear of the engine bay, right by the ignition coil, their is a single connector with a yellow and green wire. This is a tach signal used for testing. I just used a male spade connector into that.Going old school...
89L Carby FIDO, previously owned by FestivaFred
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Thanks king, your input into this is much appreciated! I think only the carby cars had a single wire, I cannot find a plug with only one wire in that location. I think I have found the tach signal wire though, it is yellow and blue according to Haynes.
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Originally posted by yousufwalton View Postwell the title sums it up, anyone ever done a cruise control ?
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The RX-7 cruise switch is a perfect fit for the Festiva dash. Also the Mazda steering column controls with cruise fit right on. The wiring is very simple to provide power through the switch to the steering column controls. I just had to follow the instruction sheet that came with the Ford cruise computer for the other wiring. The hardest part is to find space for the vacuum reservoir and servo valve in the engine compartment if you also have power steering and A/C.
Here is the Festiva cruise install manual that I got from 25horseplay.Last edited by bravekozak; 11-25-2012, 03:06 PM.
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Originally posted by bravekozak View PostThe RX-7 cruise switch is a perfect fit for the Festiva dash. Also the Mazda steering column controls with cruise fit right on. The wiring is very simple to provide power through the switch to the steering column controls. I just had to follow the instruction sheet that came with the Ford cruise computer for the other wiring. The hardest part is to find space for the vacuum reservoir and servo valve in the engine compartment if you also have power steering and A/C.
Here is the Festiva cruise install manual that I got from 25horseplay.
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Lol, you had THAT much trouble pulling a harness and wiper stalk?! Me and Karl pulled an entire dealer installed cruise control from an aspire in Columbus PnP in about 20 minutes, including the bracket for the brake petal switch, ecu and vacuum resovoir things. I wish I would have had the cash or it would be hooked up to my 5th gen 626 steering wheel buttons.
It didn't appear to be a complex system at all, the ecu was zip tied to the stock ecu, 3 wires, power ground, rpm, throttle linkage and vacuum.
Anybody with a socket set and a pocketknife can (should be able to) remove a wiper stalk in about 3 minutes.Last edited by zoom zoom; 11-25-2012, 09:05 PM.2008 Kia Rio- new beater
1987 F-150- revived and CLEAN!!!
1987 Suzuki Dual Sport- fun beater bike
1993 Festiva- Fiona, DD
1997 Aspire- Peaspire, Refurb'd, sold
1997 Aspire- Babyspire, DD
1994 Aspire - Project Kiazord
1994 Aspire- Crustyspire, RIP
"If it moves, grease it, if it don't, paint it, and if it ain't broke don't fix it!"
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Originally posted by zoom zoom View PostAnybody with a socket set and a pocketknife can (should be able to) remove a wiper stalk in about 3 minutes.
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I feel like Dr. Frankenstein today, reviving long dead threads and making horrible monsters out of them...
Anyway, almost 10 years ago(!) I successfully retrofitted the cruise control from a 1987-89 Mercury Tracer to my Festiva. This is about as close to a factory (not dealer) cruise control you will get. It was a fairly easy swap; most stuff bolted straight on with little difficulty.
Making the parts physically fit was the easy part, however. The wiring required a fair amount of creativity and research. Fortunately, the cruise control is its own entity and is not controlled by the ECU. With the help of a factory shop manual, I was able to make my own wiring harness and use the Mazda control stalk and switch, for a factory look.
While hooking this all up, I hit a major snag: The Tracer's instrument cluster has a small reed switch near the speedometer assembly that sends a pulse to the cruise control brain box. The Festiva's cluster does not have this, nor does it have a provision for installing the switch. Initially I thought I could bypass the switch by simply shorting the wires out, but I realized it was not just a simple on/off switch. Rather, the switch opens and closes constantly and a rate determined by the speedometer, which it is magnetically coupled to. This open/closing action sends a pulse to the brain box, allowing it to maintain a constant speed.
After I realized this, I was discouraged. Using the Tracer speedometer in the Festiva cluster was out of the question, it would not fit. My only option was to modify a Festiva speedometer to accept the reed switch, which I did. Regretfully I did not document this part, nor take any photos. Kind of like the KFC secret formula I guess, it's that one ingredient that tied the whole thing together.
I don't recall exactly what I did to get the reed switch to work with the Festiva speedometer, it was largely trial and error. I used a Dremel to carve out bits of the plastic enclosure and circuit board to make room for the reed switch, which thankfully is a very small part. To aid in positioning the reed switch, I wired an analog electronic tally counter (not sure what the technical name is) in series with reed switch. I connected a drill to the speedometer to rotate it while I moved the reed switch around the back of the speedometer assembly. Using the Tracer speedometer as a guide, I positioned the reed switch similarly on the Festiva speed and experimented with it until the tally counter started counting in step with the speedometer while varying the drill's RPMs. Eventually I found a spot that enabled me to get the reed switch to work, as well as provide room for mounting and wiring.
Positioning and mounting the reed switch was the hardest part of the installation. I used a Dremel to grind away bits of the plastic speedometer housing and the circuit board to make the reed switch fit, then Superglued it in place. I don't recall having to cut through and/or jump any traces on the circuit board, but at any rate I got it all back together in my Festiva, and was floored when it actually worked!!!!
So there you have it, cruise control expert level. I was considering unravelling the Festiva's wiring harness, taking the cruise control wiring from the Tracer and adding to the bundle and rewrapping it, but at that point I had working cruise control and I was happy.
If someone replicates this, please document it better for all of us to enjoy!
Regards,
TimWhite '89L auto - Sold!
Silver '06 Rav4, 95k!
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Tim, why didn't you use the tach feed for the speedo reed switch? essentially the same signal (though the voltage may be different).Trees aren't kind to me...
currently: 2 88Ls (Scrappy and Jersey), 88LX, 90L(Pepe), 91L, 91GL (Skippy) 93 GL Sport (the Mighty Favakk), 94 (Bruce) & 95 Aspire SEs, 97 Aspire (The Joker),
94 Justy 4WD, 87 Fiero GT, plus 2 parts cars. That's my fleet.
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