Highlights
- •Efforts were made to reproduce some cases of sudden unintended acceleration (SUA).
- •One possible cause of the SUA was carefully investigated.
- •Supply voltage level to the ECU was perturbed to mimic unstable power supply.
- •The wide open throttle occurred without intention with the unstable supply voltage.
- •Current research reproduced the SUA and provided a possible clue to the SUA.
Abstract
A few cases of the sudden unintended acceleration have been reported over the last few years [1–11] and some of them seemed to be somewhat related to an electronic throttle control (ETC) system [11,12] . In this experimental study, efforts were made to reproduce the cases of sudden unintended acceleration possibly related to the ETC. Typically, an ETC of the engine is managed based on signals from airflow sensor, throttle position sensor and acceleration pedal sensor. With this typical sensor configuration in mind, these sensor signals were checked for noise levels. However, none of them showed any clear relationship with the sudden unintended acceleration mainly due to the robustness of the ETC logic software. As an alternative approach, supply voltage to an engine control unit (ECU) was tempered intentionally to observe any clues for the incidents. The observed results with the supply voltage drop and fluctuation tests were rather astonishing. The throttle valve position went all the way up to 100% for around one second when the battery voltage plunged down to 7 V periodically despite that the acceleration pedal position was kept steady. As an effort to confirm the case, multiple tries were made systematically on a chassis dynamometer as well as on the test road. In this paper, detailed procedures and findings are reported accordingly.
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