Crystal Key pushed in ignition
#1
Crystal Key pushed in ignition
Curious...what would happen if the key is accidentally pushed while driving? Would it shut off the car and stop in its tracks or is there a safety switch to where it would not come out and go into park.
It was a thought while i was driving this evening with my son. Many buttons around the ignition key.
It was a thought while i was driving this evening with my son. Many buttons around the ignition key.
#3
Thanks for reply but that is not the question i was asking. While driving would it come out. Say your going 65mph and you accidentally hit it and it pushes in and pops out...
#4
Try it and let us know what happens...
#5
yes it would come out... DONT TOUCH IT!
#6
Ok that's not really good. Maybe they should have thought that through a little more. Thank you for the advice!
#7
thought what through? that people could possibly be completely so retarded and do the equivalent of taking their keys out of the ignition while driving?
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#9
If General Motors had a crystal key - you better believe their hundreds or thousands of software developers would say, what if someone were to remove the crystal key inadvertently. Astons a wee bit smaller than the main competitors, and the crystal key unique to our generation models, so I wouldn't take any chances that their systems in place thought of all worse case scenarios. My advice if you want to test it, do so at a crawl, to minimize damage. If you do post it here so we all know.
#10
I can confirm the 6MT won't restart while moving, hence the popping out the key and putting it back in relation to the question. The shut-down modes my 9 would go into (crash, emissions, etc) when I had the Antigravity battery in it, would require you to come to a complete stop before restarting. Every manual I've ever had could be restarted while moving. Boo.
#11
Let's look at this in a different way as another problem...
Consider the Toyota "stuck throttle" issue that happened some years ago.
I have a 2007 Vantage with the ignition key on the steering column; if my car suddenly went to "full throttle" I could turn the key one position back (towards the driver) to "kill the engine", but I would still be able to steer the car, albeit without power steering and brakes.
What is the proper response for this situation for the "Crystal key" Aston Martin models?
Has anyone checked the owners manual for what is recommended in that event?
Just curious as a discussion point...and as a safety matter!
Consider the Toyota "stuck throttle" issue that happened some years ago.
I have a 2007 Vantage with the ignition key on the steering column; if my car suddenly went to "full throttle" I could turn the key one position back (towards the driver) to "kill the engine", but I would still be able to steer the car, albeit without power steering and brakes.
What is the proper response for this situation for the "Crystal key" Aston Martin models?
Has anyone checked the owners manual for what is recommended in that event?
Just curious as a discussion point...and as a safety matter!
Last edited by DonL; 06-26-2019 at 08:08 PM. Reason: transposition
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