Big Blue
Well-Known Member
I tend to agree with the too many electronics in modern vehicles. Back when vehicles were a mode of transportation to get from point A to point B. And, the only electronics were an ECU to control the ignition and fuel injection, great innovations by the way. Things were much simpler. Now with the vehicles becoming lifestyle status symbols and the constant consumer demand for more and more convenience features.I'm going to go out on a limb here and say that it's way too many damn electronics shoved into the vehicle.
I myself have seen this issue before when I was working at a Ford dealer. Only happened on one Ranger. Surprisely enough it wasn't mine. Why did it happen? I have no clue. What I do know is I feel it's a collaboration of all the extra electronics shoved into the newer vehicles when manufacturers were all of a sudden wanting to get extremely innovative. When you look at all manufacturers together, you will notice they all have a bunch of problems in the same time frame starting from 2019 to now.
The vehicles have gone from having not one or two processing units to a network on multiple units that all need to communicate with with each other over multiple busses. It takes a computer network specialist to even understand it. You think a technician in the dealers shop can even know where to start, unless the system can give him a code to tell him where to look.
Any slight hiccup in the start up sequence will lock up the whole sequence and require time for things to time out and reset. Hence the need to shut it down and walk away for 15 minutes or so, come back and try again.
It's the price we pay for all the fancy features we all love and must have.
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