What button/switch to use for line lock and where to put it?
And if you actually do know somebody that dumb, are you dumb enough to loan them your car?
Been racing over 50 years now, had line locks since they were first introduced not long after I started. I have never seen a line lock button fail, other than the rubber band that holds them to the shift lever break. Have, however seen toggle switches fail. An extra toggle switch is just one more thing to go wrong.
Low drag brakes & wheel bearings, high air pressure skinny fronts, make a car roll easier. If your car doesn't roll that easily and you go in far enough, the wind never blows, etc, and your car sits there OK, you can probably get away with that. Hope your clutch never drags enough to move your car. Most sharp drivers run an adjustable stop on the clutch pedal/linkage to barely release the clutch for quicker shifts. That will often make the car tend to move when revved high enough. Doesn't sound like some of you guys aren't "there".
Hope your car never moves, causing a red light.
If somebody were to use a toggle switch instead of the button designed for a line lock, then was dumb enough to mount it where it could be accidentally turned on, they would most certainly have a safety issue.
Self induced due to stupidity, but still a safety problem.
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If somebody were to use a toggle switch instead of the button designed for a line lock, then was dumb enough to mount it where it could be accidentally turned on, they would most certainly have a safety issue.
Self induced due to stupidity, but still a safety problem.
If somebody bought an off-brand that came with no button, and use a toggle switch, I would hope they would put it in the ash tray (hoping whoever borrows the car does not smoke. lol) or some other place out of the way.
Who would borrow a car and just try out all the switches and buttons they see anyway? Nobody bright, or over 15.
They would certainly not be anybody I would loan a car to.
Nor, anybody that smokes, :-)
More wiring, switches and relays are just more things to have problems with. The KISS principle works well for most people. "Keep It Simple Stupid".
If somebody bought an off-brand that came with no button, and use a toggle switch, I would hope they would put it in the ash tray (hoping whoever borrows the car does not smoke. lol) or some other place out of the way.
Who would borrow a car and just try out all the switches and buttons they see anyway? Nobody bright, or over 15.
They would certainly not be anybody I would loan a car to.
Nor, anybody that smokes, :-)
More wiring, switches and relays are just more things to have problems with. The KISS principle works well for most people. "Keep It Simple Stupid".
I have a buddy who has a 99 T/A with H/C. He and I both weigh around the 250 mark. We have an old school racer friend that weighs 130 lbs soaking wet so we threw him in the car and told him to not shift the car like his MVB th350 Nova. We told him 6 times not to manually shift it. Guess what he does? Yup, you guessed it.
No matter what you do, if your car is more of a street car, you have to make everything dummy proof
If somebody bought an off-brand that came with no button, and use a toggle switch, I would hope they would put it in the ash tray (hoping whoever borrows the car does not smoke. lol) or some other place out of the way.
Who would borrow a car and just try out all the switches and buttons they see anyway? Nobody bright, or over 15.
They would certainly not be anybody I would loan a car to.
Nor, anybody that smokes, :-)
More wiring, switches and relays are just more things to have problems with. The KISS principle works well for most people. "Keep It Simple Stupid".






