You'll see electro-actuated brake calipers and carbon composite rotors long before you'll ever see this on a car.
Last edited by Reciprocity (2008-05-19 18:05:47)
Last edited by Reciprocity (2008-05-19 18:05:47)
ABS consists of the ECU (electronic control unit), four speed sensors for the wheels, and a few hydraulic valves.Nappy wrote:
lol @ everyone arguing about magnets
what about abs, thats all magnets lol
Last edited by Parker (2008-05-20 07:57:52)
some have magnetsParker wrote:
ABS consists of the ECU (electronic control unit), four speed sensors for the wheels, and a few hydraulic valves.Nappy wrote:
lol @ everyone arguing about magnets
what about abs, thats all magnets lol
solenoids are actuated by the ECU, not magnets.
oh, and then the rotors/calipers....but none of that has anything to do with magnetics.
Bail out tbh. You don't take damage and another car always appears when you turn around.Ayumiz wrote:
No you dont need brakes, just smash into a wall and it'll stop;p
i was under the impression that memory and CPUs had adverse consequences when magnets were put near them.LaidBackNinja wrote:
Sorry Park, but you are wrong. Computer electronics aren't damaged by magnets. Harddrives, yes. Older monitors (CRT) can go funky if placed right next to a strong magnet. But electronics like you find them in cars can handle magnets. Like someone else said, just think about all the amps and stereos. Those things are full of magnets.
By the way, my car has 0 microchips in it Oldtimers ftw.
A solenoid is a classic electromagnet.Parker wrote:
ABS consists of the ECU (electronic control unit), four speed sensors for the wheels, and a few hydraulic valves.
solenoids are actuated by the ECU, not magnets.
oh, and then the rotors/calipers....but none of that has anything to do with magnetics.
apologizeParker wrote:
i was under the impression that memory and CPUs had adverse consequences when magnets were put near them.LaidBackNinja wrote:
Sorry Park, but you are wrong. Computer electronics aren't damaged by magnets. Harddrives, yes. Older monitors (CRT) can go funky if placed right next to a strong magnet. But electronics like you find them in cars can handle magnets. Like someone else said, just think about all the amps and stereos. Those things are full of magnets.
By the way, my car has 0 microchips in it Oldtimers ftw.
so there is NO computer component that can be damaged by magnets, besides hard drives and old school monitors?
this is why i make knives and not computers
Last edited by west-phoenix-az (2008-05-21 10:13:08)
I hear magnets ruin credit cards too.Parker wrote:
i was under the impression that memory and CPUs had adverse consequences when magnets were put near them.LaidBackNinja wrote:
Sorry Park, but you are wrong. Computer electronics aren't damaged by magnets. Harddrives, yes. Older monitors (CRT) can go funky if placed right next to a strong magnet. But electronics like you find them in cars can handle magnets. Like someone else said, just think about all the amps and stereos. Those things are full of magnets.
By the way, my car has 0 microchips in it Oldtimers ftw.
so there is NO computer component that can be damaged by magnets, besides hard drives and old school monitors?
this is why i make knives and not computers