Lpgc wrote:
Orangebean wrote:
super4 wrote:
But here is a question for you- if that vacuum lead is broken does it affect the running ? It has been broken for much of the cars life and running problems have only recently happened
No- cruise control has its own vacuum pump and is completely self contained. Won't affect running in the slightest..
Got me scratching my head now! I have no P38 here to check on at the moment but I was under the impression cruise control on them was plumbed to manifold vacuum? Sure I've heard and corrected vacuum hissing from broken cruise control vac pipe at the firewall end of passenger side engine bay in the past, correcting cruise control function in some cases, and the other end of that pipe went to the manifold..
The pipe that runs away behind the manifold, in fact runs off through the bulkhead to the brake pedal switch which incorporates a valve to rapidly dump vacuum. Probably that is what you've heard hissing and would stop hissing when repaired.
As for the vac pump:
When cruise control is active and cruise ECU inputs
are acceptable, the ECU energises the vacuum pump
motor. The vacuum pump creates a vacuum in the
actuator which operates the throttle linkage. When the
required speed has been achieved, the ECU switches
off the vacuum pump. The ECU also controls a dump
valve which allows system vacuum to vent to
atmosphere.
South Hams, Devon
Currently caring for (in order of attention demanded):
- 2002 4.6 Range Rover Vogue SE LPG- Zavoli Alesei, Zeta Super, Matrix injectors (Still slightly internally incontinent)
- 1995 4.6 Range Rover HSE LPG (other half's Daily Driver)