93gsxturbo wrote: I am eagerly awaiting the standardization of the modern automobile. Like how all the PCs, printers, faxes, phones, etc in your office all talk to each other on a common standard, hopefully soon automakers will realize it benefits all of them to share a standard for inter-module communication. Diagnostics then becomes very simple. Use a diagnostic tool to verify proper inputs and outputs, and a door module is a door module, just needs to have the ROM in the door module reflashed to work in the manner your chassis expects it to. Ideally just read the ROM on the old, bad module, and flash it to the new, blank module. Failing that, hop on the system of tubes and download the new flash, or maybe the manufacturer of the module has a repository available of all the ROMs that work on that module and you just pick the one you want. Diagnosing issues on modern cars is super easy. I hook my TechII into the OBDII port on my Corvette and go to the door control module screen. From there, I can view the status of all inputs and outputs, test switches, and command inputs to the module to see if the outputs are working well. Instead of diagnosing 1 million feet of wire, switches, etc, I only need a power, ground, and signal wires run to the door, all the intra-door communication and function is handled by the door module. The wire runs are short, less failure-prone, and easy to check. The modules, while by themselves seem expensive, keep in mind this is a world I can buy a touchscreen tablet for $100, a standardized module with a few relays and transistors is not an expensive item. Plug it in, talk to the module, load the ROM, and you are in business! This also opens up a huge opportunity for customization. Want auto-roll-down windows? Open up the rom, change a few lines of code, load your new custom rom, and boom! Auto roll down windows with no hardware changes whatsoever. Want your windows to be able to be rolled up when you hit the remote on your lock fob? A few lines of code referencing the status of the keyless entry module and you have it!
is this an argument for or against more technology in cars, because you just pointed out everything that i hate about new cars.. why does a car need a "door module"?
i remember when i got to ride with one of GM's head engineers in a Z06 Corvette as we idled around the MN state fairgrounds at the Car Craft show in '08.. i asked him how a person was supposed to get out of the car if the car was smashed up in a ditch and the car lost all power since the doors opened by pushing buttons.. he didn't have an answer and told me that they didn't even consider the ability to get out of their super duper street legal race car in situations like that..
he was one of the bosses of the group of engineers that couldn't figure out why the LS7 powered Solstice that they had built just died out of nowhere while cruising around the same fairgrounds on the same day- they had scan tools hooked up testing every module and couldn't figure it out.. one bystander asked them if they checked to see if it was out of gas- they never thought of that.. they dumped a couple of gallons of gas in it and it started right up.. that car was badass, as long as it had gas in it..