stop start OLDSMOBILE SILHOUETTE 1998 User Guide
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The traction  control system warning  light may come  on 
for  the  following  reasons: 
If there’s  a  brake  system problem that is specifically 
related to traction  control, the traction  control system 
will turn 
off and  the warning  light will come  on. If 
your  brakes  begin to  overheat,  the  traction control 
system will turn  off and the warning  light will come 
on until your  brakes cool down. 
If the traction  control system is affected by  an 
engine-related  problem,  the system will turn off and 
the  warning  light  will  come on. 
If  the  traction  control system warning light comes on 
and  stays 
on for an extended period  of time  when  the 
system 
is turned  on, your  vehicle  needs service. 
Low Traction  Light  (Option) 
LOW 
TRACTION 
If your vehicle  has  the 
traction  control  system, 
there  will be  a 
LOW 
TRACTION light on the 
instrument  panel. 
When  your anti-lock  system  is adjusting brake pressure 
to  help  avoid  a  braking  skid, or when your traction 
control  system is  limiting wheel spin,  the 
LOW 
TRACTION  light will come  on. Slippery road 
conditions  may exist  if this light comes on, 
so adjust 
your  driving  accordingly. The light will come on and 
stay 
on for  four  seconds  when your anti-lock  system 
adjusts  brake  pressure  for less  than  four  seconds  or 
when your traction control system  limits wheel spin  for 
less  than  four  seconds.  Otherwise, the  light will 
go out 
as soon  as the anti-lock  system 
stops adjusting brake 
pressure  or  the traction control system stops  limiting 
wheel spin. 
The 
LOW TRACTION  light  also comes on briefly, as  a 
bulb  check,  when the  engine  is started.  If the  light 
doesn’t  come on then, have it fixed 
so it will be  there to 
tell  you  when 
the system  is active. 
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NOTICE: 
If you  keep  driving  your  vehicle  with  this  light 
on,  after  a  while,  your  emission  controls  may  not 
work  as  well,  your  fuel  economy  may  not  be  as 
good  and  your  engine  may  not  run  as  smoothly. 
This  could  lead 
to costly  repairs  that  may  not  be 
covered  by  your  warranty. 
This  light  should come  on,  as a check to show you it is 
working, when the ignition is on and the engine is  not 
running.  If the light doesn’t come 
on, have it repaired. 
This  light will also  come 
on during a malfunction  in one 
of two ways: 
Light  Flashing -- A misfire condition has been 
detected.  A misfire increases vehicle  emissions and 
may  damage  the emission  control system on your 
vehicle. Retailer  or qualified service center diagnosis 
and  service  may be required. 
Light On Steady -- An emission  control system 
malfunction  has been detected 
on your vehicle. 
Retailer  or qualified  service  center  diagnosis and 
service  may be required. 
If the  Light Is Flashing 
The following  may prevent more  serious damage  to 
your vehicle: 
Reducing vehicle speed. 
Avoiding hard accelerations. 
Avoiding  steep uphill grades. 
If you are towing a trailer,  reduce the amount  of 
cargo being hauled  as soon as  it 
is possible. 
If the light stops  flashing and remains on steady,  see “If 
the  Light  Is On  Steady”  following. 
If  the light continues 
to flash, when it  is safe to  do so, 
stop the vehicle. Find a safe  place  to park your vehicle. 
Turn the key  off, wait at least 10 seconds  and restart  the 
engine.  If the  light  remains on steady,  see “If the Light 
Is On  Steady”  following.  If the  light  is  still flashing, 
follow the previous steps, and  drive the vehicle  to your 
retailer  or qualified  service  center  for  service. 
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If you  turn  off the ignition  or  radio with a disc  in  the 
player, it will stay in  the player. When you  turn on the 
ignition  or system, the  disc will start playing where  it 
was  stopped. 
If you press EJECT but  don’t  remove the 
disc, the player will pull the  disc back in  to protect  it 
after about one minute.  If you  leave  a compact  disc 
in  the player while listening  to  the radio,  it may 
become warm.  This  feature 
allows rear seat passengers  to listen to a 
different music  source than the  front  seat  passengers 
including AM-FM automatic tone control,  cassette tapes 
or 
CDs. For example,  rear seat passengers  may listen to 
a cassette  tape or CD through headphones while the 
driver listens  to the radio through the  front speakers. 
The  rear  seat passengers have  control of the volume  for 
each headphone. Be aware that  the  front seat audio 
controls  always override the  rear  seat audio controls. 
Note  that 
this feature  is  intended  for  rear  seat  passengers. 
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Avoid needless  heavy braking.  Some  people  drive  in 
spurts 
-- heavy  acceleration  followed by heavy 
braking 
-- rather  than  keeping pace with traffic.  This is a 
mistake.  Your brakes  may not have  time  to  cool  between 
hard  stops.  Your brakes  will wear  out much  faster if you 
do  a lot 
of heavy  braking,  If you keep pace with  the 
traffic and  allow  realistic  following  distances, 
you will 
eliminate  a lot  of unnecessary  braking.  That  means 
better  braking  and longer  brake life. 
If  your  engine  ever  stops  while  you’re  driving,  brake 
normally but  don’t pump your brakes.  If you 
do, the 
pedal  may get  harder 
to push down.  If your  engine 
stops,  you will  still have 
some power brake  assist. But 
you will  use 
it when you brake.  Once  the  power assist  is 
used  up,  it  may take  longer  to  stop  and  the brake  pedal 
will be  harder  to  push. 
Anti-Lock Brakes (ABS) 
Your vehicle has anti-lock  brakes (ABS).  ABS  is  an 
advanced  electronic  braking  system that will help 
prevent  a braking  skid. 
When  you start your  engine,  or  when you begin  to  drive 
away, your anti-lock  brake system will check  itself. You 
may  hear 
a momentary motor  or  clicking  noise while 
this  test is going on, and 
you may even notice that your 
brake  pedal  moves 
a little. (You  may  also hear a  clicking 
noise  if you  leave  the  ignition  in the 
RUN position  for 
about  four  seconds  before  starting  the vehicle.) This 
is  normal. 
If there’s a problem with the 
anti-lock brake  system, this 
warning  light will stay on  or 
flash.  See  “Anti-Lock 
Brake System Warning 
Light’’  in the Index. 
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0 Do not get  too  close  to  the vehicle you want  to 
pass  while  you’re  awaiting an opportunity. For one 
thing,  following  too  closely reduces your  area of 
vision, especially  if you’re following 
a larger 
vehicle. Also,  you won’t have  adequate  space  if the 
vehicle ahead suddenly  slows 
or stops. Keep back a 
reasonable distance. 
When it looks  like a chance to pass  is coming  up, 
start  to accelerate  but stay  in the right  lane and don’t 
get  too  close. Time your move 
so you will be 
increasing speed  as  the  time comes 
to move into  the 
other  lane. 
If the way is clear  to  pass,  you will have a 
“running start” that more than makes  up for  the 
distance  you would  lose 
by dropping back. And  if 
something happens  to  cause you to cancel your pass, 
you  need only slow down and drop back again and 
wait  for  another  opportunity. 
If other cars are lined up to  pass  a slow vehicle, wait 
your turn. But take  care  that someone isn’t trying to 
pass  you as you  pull 
out to pass the slow vehicle. 
Remember  to  glance over your  shoulder and check 
the  blind spot. 
Check your mirrors,  glance  over your shoulder  and 
start your left  lane change signal  before moving  out 
of  the right  lane  to pass. When  you are 
far enough 
ahead 
of the passed vehicle  to see its  front  in your 
inside  mirror,  activate  your right  lane  change signal 
and move back  into the right  lane. (Remember that 
your right  outside mirror is  convex.  The  vehicle you 
just  passed  may seem  to 
be farther  away from  you 
than  it really  is.) 
0 Try not to pass more than  one vehicle at a time 
on two-lane roads. Reconsider  before passing the 
next vehicle. 
Don’t  overtake  a slowly moving  vehicle too rapidly. 
Even though  the brake lamps 
are not flashing, it  may 
be slowing down  or  starting 
to turn. 
0 If you’re being passed, make  it  easy  for  the 
following  driver  to  get  ahead of you. Perhaps  you 
can  ease  a little  to  the right. 
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Loss of Control 
Let’s review  what driving  experts say about  what 
happens  when the  three  control systems (brakes,  steering 
and  acceleration)  don’t  have enough friction where the 
tires meet the road  to  do what the  driver  has  asked. 
In any  emergency,  don’t  give  up.  Keep  trying  to  steer  and 
constantly  seek  an  escape  route  or area  of less  danger. 
In 
a skid,  a driver can lose control  of the  vehicle. 
Defensive  drivers  avoid  most  skids  by taking  reasonable 
care  suited  to existing  conditions,  and by not  “overdriving” 
those  conditions.  But  skids  are always  possible. 
The  three  types 
of skids  correspond  to your vehicle’s 
three  control  systems.  In the  braking  skid,  your wheels 
aren’t  rolling.  In  the steering  or  cornering  skid,  too 
much speed  or  steering in a curve  causes  tires to  slip  and 
lose  cornering  force.  And  in the acceleration  skid, 
too 
much throttle  causes  the  driving  wheels to spin. 
A cornering skid and an  acceleration  skid  are  best 
handled  by easing  your foot off the  accelerator  pedal. 
If your vehicle  starts to slide,  ease  your foot off the 
accelerator  pedal  and quickly steer 
the way  you want the 
vehicle  to go. 
If you  start  steering quickly enough, your 
vehicle  may straighten  out. Always  be ready  for a 
second  skid if it occurs. 
Of course,  traction is reduced when water, snow, ice, 
gravel  or  other  material is on the road. For safety, you’ll 
want  to slow down and  adjust your driving  to these 
conditions.  It  is  important  to  slow down on slippery 
surfaces  because  stopping distance will be longer and 
vehicle  control  more limited. 
While  driving  on a surface  with reduced traction,  try 
your  best to avoid  sudden steering,  acceleration  or 
braking  (including  engine braking by  shifting to a lower 
gear).  Any sudden changes  could  cause  the tires to slide. 
You  may  not  realize 
the surface is slippery until your 
vehicle  is  skidding.  Learn to  recognize  warning 
clues 
-- such  as enough water,  ice  or packed snow  on 
the  road  to make a “mirrored surface” 
-- and slow 
down when you have any  doubt. 
Remember:  Any anti-lock  brake system 
(ABS) helps 
avoid only the braking  skid. 
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Driving  in  Rain  and  on Wet Roads Rain  and  wet roads can mean driving trouble. On  a wet 
road,  you can’t stop, accelerate  or 
turn as well because 
your tire-to-road  traction isn’t  as good 
as on dry roads. 
And,  if your tires don’t have much tread left, you’ll get 
even less traction.  It’s always wise  to  go slower and  be 
cautious 
if rain starts to fall  while  you are  driving.  The 
surface  may get wet  suddenly when your reflexes  are 
tuned  for  driving  on  dry pavement. 
The heavier the rain, the harder  it  is  to  see. Even if your 
windshield wiper blades  are in good  shape,  a  heavy rain 
can make 
it harder  to  see road signs and traffic signals, 
pavement markings, the edge  of the road and even 
people walking. 
It’s  wise to keep your wiping equipment  in good  shape 
and  keep your windshield washer tank  filled with 
washer  fluid. Replace your windshield wiper inserts 
when  they  show signs of streaking 
or missing  areas on 
the windshield,  or when  strips of rubber start to separate 
from the inserts. 
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Making  Turns 
NOTICE: 
Making  very  sharp  turns  while  trailering  could 
cause  the  trailer  to  come  in  contact  with  the vehicle.  Your vehicle  could 
be damaged.  Avoid 
making  very  sharp  turns  while  trailering. 
When  you’re  turning  with  a trailer, make wider turns 
than  normal.  Do  this 
so your trailer won’t  strike  soft 
shoulders,  curbs,  road signs,  trees or  other  objects. 
Avoid  jerky  or  sudden maneuvers.  Signal well 
in  advance. 
Turn  Signals  When  Towing  a Trailer 
When  you tow  a trailer, your  vehicle  has  to  have 
extra  wiring. 
The  arrows on your  instrument panel will flash 
whenever 
you signal  a  turn or  lane  change.  Properly 
hooked up,  the  trailer lamps will  also  flash, telling other 
drivers  you’re  about  to  turn, change  lanes  or  stop.  When 
towing  a trailer, the  arrows on your  instrument 
panel will  flash  for turns even  if the bulbs on the  trailer 
are  burned 
out. Thus,  you  may  think drivers  behind you 
are  seeing  your signal  when they  are  not. It’s important 
to  check occasionally  to be  sure  the  trailer  bulbs are 
still  working. 
Driving  On  Grades 
Reduce speed and  shift  to  a lower gear before you start 
down  a  long  or  steep  downgrade. 
If you don’t  shift 
down,  you might have  to  use your brakes 
so much that 
they would get  hot and no  longer work well. 
On a  long uphill grade,  shift down and  reduce your 
speed to around 
45 mph (70 km/h)  to  reduce  the 
possibility  of engine  and transaxle  overheating. 
If 
you are  towing  a trailer that weighs more than 
1,000 lbs. (450 kg), you may  prefer to drive  in 
THIRD 
(3) instead of AUTOMATIC  OVERDRIVE (D) 
(or, as you need to,  a lower  gear).  This  will minimize 
heat  build-up  and extend  the life  of your  transaxle. 
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Parking on Hills 
You really should not park your vehicle, with a trailer 
attached,  on a hill. 
If something goes wrong, your rig 
could start  to move. People can be injured, and both 
your  vehicle  and the trailer can  be damaged. 
But 
if you  ever  have  to park your rig on a hill, here’s 
how 
to do  it: 
1.  Apply your regular brakes, but  don’t  shift into 
PARK 
(P) yet. 
2. Have  someone place chocks under  the trailer wheels. 
3. When  the wheel chocks are in place, release the 
regular brakes until the chocks  absorb the load. 
4. Reapply  the regular brakes. Then apply your parking 
brake,  and then  shift  to PARK (P). 
5. Release the regular  brakes. 
When You Are  Ready to Leave  After 
Parking  on  a  Hill 
1. Apply your regular brakes and hold the pedal down 
while you: 
Start your engine; 
Shift  into  a gear;  and 
Release the parking brake. 
2. Let up on the brake pedal. 
3. Drive slowly until the trailer  is  clear of the chocl ss . 
4. Stop  and have someone pick  up and  store  the chocks. 
Maintenance  When  Trailer  Towing 
Your  vehicle  will need  service more often when you’re 
pulling a trailer.  See the Maintenance Schedule  for more 
on this. Things that  are especially important in trailer 
operation  are automatic transaxle  fluid (don’t overfill), 
engine  oil, belts,  cooling system and brake adjustment. 
Each  of these  is covered in this manual, and the Index 
will help you find them quickly.  If you’re  trailering,  it’s 
a good idea to review these sections before  you start 
your  trip. 
Check periodically  to  see that all hitch nuts and bolts 
are  tight. 
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I 
NOTICE: 
Improperly tightened wheel nuts can lead  to 
brake  pulsation  and  rotor  damage. 
To avoid 
expensive  brake repairs,  evenly tighten the  wheel 
nuts  in the  proper  sequence  and 
to the proper 
torque  specification. 
Don’t try to  put a wheel  cover  on  the  compact  spare tire. It 
won’t  fit.  Store  the  wheel  cover  securely 
in the  rear of the 
vehicle 
until you  have  the  flat tire  repaired  or  replaced. 
I NOTICE: 
Wheel  covers  won’t  fit on  your  compact  spare. If 
you try  to  put  a  wheel  cover  on  your compact 
spare,  you  could  damage  the cover  or the spare. 
Storing a Flat  or  Spare  Tire and Tools 
Storing  a  jack,  a  tire or other  equipment in the 
passenger  compartment 
of the vehicle  could 
cause  injury. 
In a sudden stop  or collision,  loose 
equipment  could strike  someone.  Store all  these 
in the  proper  place. 
Lay the tire  near  the  rear of the vehicle with  the valve 
stem  down.  Slide  the  cable  retainer  through the  center 
of 
the wheel and  start  to  raise  the tire. When  the  tire  is 
almost  in  the  stored  position,  turn the tire 
so the valve is 
towards  the  rear 
of the vehicle.  This will help  when  you 
check  and maintain  tire  pressure  in the  spare. 
Keep  raising  the  wheel until you hear  the  hoist 
mechanism  click twice.  This means  the wheel is firmly 
stored  against  the underside 
of the vehicle. Push 
against  the  wheel to be  sure  it  does not  move and is 
stored securely. 
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