Table 1 shows two common vehicle speed control related problems of the 2004 Chrysler Crossfire.
| Problem Category | Number of Problems |
|---|---|
| Accelerator Pedal Sensor problems | |
| Vehicle Speed Control problems |
The contact owns a 2004 Chrysler Crossfire. While driving between 5-60 mph, the vehicle would not accelerate when the accelerator pedal was depressed. The vehicle would not accelerate without warning. The contact pulled over and was restarted. The failure stopped after the vehicle was restarted. The failure occurred intermittently. The dealer was unable to duplicate or repair the failure. The failure mileage was 32,000 and current mileage was 34,150. Updated 03-04-08 the consumer was told the problem was the accelerator pedal sensor. Once it was replaced, the problem stopped.
This is a common problem on 1000's of Crossfire's and mercedes (all models from 1998 forward). This issue is the bas system and brakes. Intermittingly, and usually during warmer weather when applying the brakes the bas light comes on, as does the light indicator. The issue is that the brake lights do not come on. There is a fault where if the bas is not working, the brake lights do not come on. They are tied together in the electronics. The bas is not required to stop the vehicle, however no brake lights because of the fault is extremely unsafe. The vehicle cannot be driven. Research online has found 1000's of complaints, no resolution and typically hundreds or thousands in repair costs that do not fix the issue. The brake lights should run independently of the bas system. A common fix is connecting an inline fuse from the brake switch to the brake light, if one is mechanically inclined to do so. Contacting mb states they know the issue but cannot determine the cause they also stated too costly to change the system for a % of owners. Other car manufacturers have brake lights wired separately from bas systems.