Tuesday, February 13, 2007

Turn the heat



The four levers from top to bottom are:

  1. The windscreen air flow. Left is closed, right is open. (There's a little windshield symbol attempting to depict this.)

  2. The air temperature. Left is no heat, right is maximum heat.

  3. The footwell air flow. Left is open, right is closed. (There's a little arrow pointing down, implying air down there)

  4. The rear ceiling air flow. Left is open, right is closed. Rear ceiling air is not heated. (Again, there's a little picture trying to convey this.)

The dash air flow is controlled directly on each dash vent. Up is closed, down is open. Dash air is NOT heated in '87 & older vans. Dash air can be heated (via the 2nd lever) on '88 & newer vans. (Some late 87 vans had the dash heat.)

The door 'vents' are air exit vents that allow air to exit the van when opened. Forward is open, rearward position is closed. (This applies only to '87 & older vans. '88 & newer have air exits at the back end of the rear-side windows that are always open)

Colors are used in the vent symbols as follows: Blue is cold. Red is hot. White is variable from cold to hot. Thus the rear ceiling vent symbol is blue, depicting that only cold air is available there.

All of these air vent controls operate independently except that closing one air outlet will naturally cause more air to flow from the open vents.

Note that none of the levers control as an 'OR' function like: left for dash air -OR- right for foot air. They are all just simple open & close of one device only.

There are no 'recirculate' controls. If you want air flow, it must come in from outside the van. If you want NO air flow, just close each vent independently.

Thursday, February 8, 2007

Dangerous tunnel

Another movie you can find here
This is really extremely strange. I don't know what happening exactly, in the prev video I was thinking that is something like ice on the road. But this one is on a tunnel so it no excuses. I don't know exactly what happening, maybe because of the air currents or just something psychological that is happening with the drivers because of the lighting.

Dangerous corner

I don't know exactly what is going on there but something is relay strange in this corner.

Monday, February 5, 2007

ATV is:

In replay the question in the comment below about what is an ATV,here is a cite from Wikipedia:
The term "all-terrain vehicle" is used in a general sense to describe any of a number of small open motorized buggies and tricycles designed for off-road use. However, the American National Standards Institute (ANSI) defines an ATV as a vehicle that travels on low pressure tires, with a seat that is straddled by the operator, and with handlebars for steering control. By the ANSI definition, it is intended for use by a single operator. The 4-wheeled versions are most commonly called "quads," "four-wheelers" or "ATVs" in the United States and Canada, and "quad bikes" or "quad cycles" in other English-speaking countries. Models with 3 wheels are typically known as ATCs (though this is a Honda trademark[1]) and "three-wheelers," and less commonly "all-terrain cycles" and "trikes." 6- and 8-wheel models exist for specialized applications. The rider sits on these models just like on a motorcycle, but the extra wheels make them more stable at slow speeds. ATVs can also be considered Off Highway Vehicles (OHV) or Off Road Vehicles (ORV), along with motorcycles, Jeeps and other off-road capable machines.

Wednesday, January 3, 2007

I am back.

I am back on town. My vacation was extended a little bit. I was somewhere in the mountains and I was riding an ATV. That was the best part of the vacation.