Originally posted by Geo@Oct 23 2005, 10:01 PM
There is currently no rule that would allow for that.
[snapback]63317[/snapback]
Actually, George, there is.
The new rule states,
"The installation of a resistor is allowed between the sensor and the OEM wiring harness."
There are no definitions of "a resistor" in the GCR (or other rules) nor are there any further restrictions on "a resistor" such as length, size, weight, blah, blah, blah. Following logic that even
you have used in the past, therefore there
are no restrictions on what one can do with "a resistor" or how one makes "a resistor".
In the dictionary, "resistor" is defined as, "a device used to control current in an electric circuit by providing resistance." Any electrical guru knows that
all wire has resistance, and that resistance increases with length of the wire. Ergo,
any wire is a resistor, not just the little items you buy at Radio Shack in a baggie. On the other hand, where does one define the extents of a length of a resistor? What if you were to buy one of the shrink-wrapped resistor from The Shack and added 3 feet of wire to each end? Who's the define where the resistor ends and the OEM harness begins?
Finally, the MAF is definitely a sensor.
So, taken to its extreme possibilities, what Bill (jokingly) proposes is, plain and simple, legal. If Bill got protested and I was ruling on it, I would pass it. Yep, it's against the spirit of the rules, but it's dead-nuts-on the letter of the rules. You can pull out the "tortured interpretation" sonata all you want but it's the same mindset that got us suspension bearings being called "bushings"... - GA