OLDSMOBILE SILHOUETTE 2003 Owners Manual
Manufacturer: OLDSMOBILE, Model Year: 2003, Model line: SILHOUETTE, Model: OLDSMOBILE SILHOUETTE 2003Pages: 466, PDF Size: 21.55 MB
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The broken  tape detection feature  of your cassette 
tape  player  may identify  the cleaning cassette  as 
a  damaged  tape,  in error.  To prevent the  cleaning 
cassette  from being ejected,  use the following steps: 
1. Turn  the ignition on. 
2. Turn the radio off. 
3. Press  and  hold the TAPE  CD button  for five 
seconds.  READY will appear  on  the  display and 
a  cassette  symbol will flash for five  seconds. 
4. Insert the scrubbing action cleaning cassette. 
5. Eject  the cleaning cassette after  the manufacturer’s 
recommended  cleaning time. 
After  the cleaning cassette  is ejected, the  broken tape 
detection feature will  be active again. 
You  may  also choose  a  non-scrubbing action, wet-type 
cleaner  which  uses  a  cassette with a fabric belt  to 
clean  the  tape head.  This type  of cleaning cassette will 
not eject  on its own.  A  non-scrubbing action cleaner 
may  not clean as thoroughly  as the scrubbing type 
cleaner.  The  use  of a non-scrubbing action, dry-type 
cleaning cassette  is not  recommended.  After  you 
clean the player,  press and hold the  EJT 
button for five  seconds to reset  the CLEAN  indicator. 
The  radio will display  CLEANED to show  the  indicator 
was  reset. 
Cassettes are subject to  wear  and  the  sound  quality 
may  degrade  over time.  Always  make  sure  the  cassette 
tape  is  in good  condition before  you  have  your  tape 
player  serviced. 
Care of Your  CDs  and  DVDs 
Handle  discs carefully.  Store  them in their  original  cases 
or  other protective  cases  and  away  from  direct  sunlight 
and  dust.  If the surface  of a  disc  is soiled,  dampen 
a  clean,  soft cloth  in a  mild,  neutral  detergent  solution 
and  clean  it, wiping  from  the  center to  the  edge. 
Be  sure  never  to touch the  side  without  writing  when 
handling discs. Pick  up discs  by  grasping  the  outer 
edges  or  the edge  of the  hole  and  the outer  edge. 
Care of Your  CD  and  DVD  Player 
The  use  of  CD  lens cleaner discs is not  advised,  due to 
the  risk  of contaminating  the lens  of  the  CD optics 
with  lubricants internal  to the  CD  mechanism. 
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Cleaning Your DVD  Player 
When  cleaning  the  outside  DVD cabinet face and 
buttons,  use  only  a  clean  cloth dampened  with 
clean  water. 
Fixed Mast  Antenna 
The  fixed  mast antenna can  withstand most car washes 
without  being damaged.  If the  mast  should  ever 
become  slightly  bent,  you can straighten 
it out by hand. 
If the  mast is badly  bent, as it might  be by vandals, - 
Cleaning  the  Video  Screen you should replace it. 
Check  occasionally to  be sure the  mast is still tightened 
When  Cleaning  the video  Screen,  Use  Only  a Clean  cloth  to the fender. 
If tightening  is required,  tighten by 
dampened  with  clean  water.  Use  care  when  directly hand, then with  a  wrench  one  quarter  turn. 
touching  or  cleaning the  screen,  as  damage  may  result. 
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b NOTES 
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Section Driving  Your  Vehicle 
Your 
Driving. the Road. and Your Vehicle .......... 4-2 
Defensive  Driving 
........................................... 4.2 
Drunken  Driving 
............................................. 4.3 
Braking 
......................................................... 4.6 
Traction  Control  System  (TCS) 
....................... 4.10 
Steering 
...................................................... 4.12 
Off-Road  Recovery 
....................................... 4.14 
Passing 
........................................ .... 4.14 
Loss  of Control 
.................................. .... 4.16 
Driving  at  Night 
......................................... 4.17 
Driving  in Rain  and  on  Wet  Roads 
.............. 4-18 
Control  of a Vehicle ........................................ 4-6 
All-Wheel  Drive  (AWD)  System 
....................... 4-1 1  City  Driving 
.................................................. 4.21 
Freeway  Driving 
............................... ..... 4.22 
Before  Leaving  on a  Long Trip 
....................... 4-23 
Highway  Hypnosis 
........................................ 4-24 
Winter  Driving 
.............................................. 4.26 
Ice  or  Snow 
.............................................. 4-30 
Towing .......................................................... 4-32 
Towing  Your Vehicle 
..................................... 4-32 
Recreational Vehicle  Towing 
........................... 4-32 
Loading  Your Vehicle 
.................................... 4-34 
Towing  a  Trailer 
.............................. ..... 4-36 
Hill 
and  Mountain  Roads 
................................ 4-24 
If You  Are  Stuck:  In Sand,  Mud, 
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Your  Driving,  the Road,  and 
Your  Vehicle 
Defensive Driving 
The  best advice  anyone  can give  about  driving  is: 
Drive defensively. 
Please  start with a very  important safety device  in  your 
vehicle:  Buckle  up.  See 
Safety Belts: They Are for 
Everyone on page 1-22. 
Defensive driving really  means “be  ready for  anything.” 
On  city  streets,  rural roads  or freeways,  it means 
“always expect the  unexpected.”  Rear-end 
collisions are  about  the  most  preventable  of 
accidents.  Yet they are  common.  Allow  enough  following 
distance. It’s the best defensive driving  maneuver, 
in  both city and rural  driving.  You  never  know  when 
the  vehicle in front  of  you is going 
to brake  or  turn 
suddenly. 
Defensive driving  requires  that a driver  concentrate  on 
the  driving task.  Anything  that  distracts from  the 
driving task 
- such  as concentrating  on  a  cellular 
telephone call,  reading, or reaching  for  something  on 
the  floor 
- makes  proper defensive driving  more  difficult 
and  can  even  cause  a collision,  with  resulting injury. 
Ask  a passenger 
to help  do  things  like this,  or pull off the 
road 
in a  safe  place to  do  them  yourself.  These  simple 
defensive driving techniques could  save  your  life. 
Assume  that  pedestrians or other drivers are going to 
be  careless  and  make  mistakes. Anticipate  what 
they  might 
do. Be  ready  for their  mistakes. 
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Drunken Driving 
Death and injury  associated  with  drinking and driving is 
a  national  tragedy. 
It’s the  number  one  contributor to 
the highway  death toll, claiming  thousands of victims 
every  year. 
Alcohol  affects  four  things  that  anyone  needs  to 
drive  a  vehicle: 
Judgment 
Muscular  Coordination 
Vision 
Attentiveness. 
Police  records  show  that  almost half of all motor 
vehicle-related  deaths  involve  alcohol.  In most  cases, 
these  deaths  are the  result 
of someone  who  was 
drinking  and driving.  In recent  years,  more  than 
16,000 annual motor vehicle-related  deaths have been 
associated  with  the  use  of alcohol,  with  more  than 
300,000 people injured.  Many adults 
- by some estimates, nearly 
half the  adult 
population 
- choose never to  drink  alcohol, so they 
never drive after drinking. For persons under 
21, 
it’s  against  the law  in every U.S. state to drink alcohol. 
There  are good  medical,  psychological and 
developmental reasons for these  laws. 
The obvious  way 
to eliminate the  leading highway 
safety  problem 
is for people  never  to  drink alcohol 
and then  drive. But what 
if people  do? How much is 
“too much” if someone plans  to  drive? It’s a lot less than 
many  might think. Although 
it depends  on each person 
and  situation,  here is some general information on 
the  problem. 
The  Blood  Alcohol Concentration  (BAC)  of someone 
who  is drinking depends upon  four  things: 
The amount of alcohol consumed 
0 The drinker’s  body  weight 
e The amount  of food that  is consumed before and 
during drinking 
consume the alcohol. 
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According to the  American  Medical Association, 
a 
180 Ib  (82  kg) person  who  drinks three 12 ounce 
(355 ml) bottles  of beer  in  an hour will  end  up with a 
BAC  of about 
0.06 percent. The  person  would reach the 
same  BAC  by drinking three  4  ounce (120 ml) glasses 
of  wine 
or three  mixed  drinks if each had 1 - 1/2 ounces 
(45 ml)  of a liquor like whiskey, gin  or vodka.  It’s 
the  amount 
of alcohol  that counts.  For  example, 
if the  same  person drank three double  martinis 
(3 ounces  or 90 ml of liquor  each)  within  an  hour, 
the  person’s  BAC  would  be  close to 
0.12 percent. 
A  person  who  consumes  food just before  or  during 
drinking will  have  a  somewhat  lower BAC  level. 
There  is a  gender  difference,  too.  Women  generally 
have  a  lower relative percentage  of body  water 
than  men.  Since alcohol  is carried in  body  water,  this 
means  that a woman  generally  will  reach  a higher 
BAC  level than  a  man of her  same  body  weight  when 
each  has  the same  number  of  drinks. 
The  law in  an increasing  number of 
U.S. states,  and 
throughout  Canada,  sets  the  legal limit at  0.08  percent. 
In  some  other countries,  the limit is  even  lower.  For 
example, it  is 0.05  percent  in both  France  and  Germany. 
The  BAC  limit for all commercial  drivers in the United 
States is  0.04 percent. 
The  BAC  will be  over 
0.10 percent  after  three  to 
six drinks (in  one  hour). Of course,  as we’ve  seen, 
it  depends  on how  much  alcohol is  in the  drinks, 
and  how  quickly the person drinks  them. 
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But  the  ability  to  drive  is affected well below a  BAC of 
0.10  percent.  Research  shows  that  the driving skills 
of  many  people  are  impaired at a BAC  approaching 
0.05  percent,  and  that  the  effects are worse  at  night.  All 
drivers  are  impaired at  BAC levels above  0.05 percent. 
Statistics  show  that  the  chance 
of being  in  a collision 
increases  sharply  for  drivers  who  have a  BAC of 
0.05  percent  or  above. 
A driver  with a BAC  level  of 
0.06 percent  has  doubled  his or  her  chance  of  having a 
collision.  At a BAC  level  of  0.10 percent,  the chance 
of  this  driver  having  a collision is 12  times greater;  at a 
level  of  0.15  percent,  the  chance is  25 times greater! 
The  body  takes  about  an  hour  to  rid itself  of the alcohol 
in  one  drink. 
No amount  of  coffee  or  number  of  cold 
showers  will  speed  that  up. 
“1’11 be  careful” isn’t the 
right  answer.  What  if  there’s  an  emergency,  a  need to 
take  sudden  action,  as  when  a child darts into the 
street? 
A person  with  even  a  moderate BAC might  not 
be  able  to  react  quickly  enough  to  avoid the collision.  rhere’s 
something else  about drinking  and  driving  that 
many  people don’t  know. Medical research shows 
that  alcohol  in a  person’s  system  can  make crash 
injuries  worse, especially injuries  to  the brain,  spinal 
cord  or heart. This  means that when  anyone  who 
has been drinking 
- driver  or  passenger - is  in 
a  crash,  that person’s  chance  of being  killed or 
permanently disabled  is higher  than if the  person 
had not been drinking. 
Drir  ng  and the1  ing is very  dangerous. 
Your  reflexes, perceptions, attentiveness and 
judgement can  be affected  by  even a small 
amount  of alcohol.  You  can  have  a serious 
- or 
even fatal  -collision 
if you  drive after drinking. 
Please don’t drink and drive  or ride with a driver 
who  has been drinking. Ride  home in a cab;  or 
if 
not drink. 
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Control of a Vehicle 
You have three  systems  that make your vehicle  go  where 
you  want  it to go.  They  are the brakes,  the steering and 
the  accelerator.  All three  systems  have  to do  their  work  at 
the  places  where the tires  meet  the road. 
Sometimes,  as when  you’re  driving on  snow  or  ice, 
it’s  easy  to ask  more 
of those control  systems than the 
tires  and  road can provide.  That means  you  can  lose 
control 
of your  vehicle. 
Braking 
Braking action involves perception  time and 
reaction  time. 
First,  you  have  to decide  to push  on  the  brake  pedal. 
That’s 
perception  time. Then  you  have  to  bring up  your 
foot  and do it. That’s 
reaction  time. 
Average reaction  time is about  3/4 of a  second. 
But that’s only  an  average.  It  might  be  less  with  one 
driver  and  as  long  as two  or  three seconds  or  more  with 
another. Age, physical  condition,  alertness, coordination 
and eyesight all play a  part. 
So do  alcohol,  drugs 
and  frustration. But  even in 3/4  of a second,  a vehicle 
moving  at 
60 mph (I00 km/h) travels 66 feet (20 m). 
That  could  be  a lot of distance  in an  emergency, 
so  keeping  enough  space  between  your  vehicle  and 
others  is important. 
And,  of course, actual  stopping  distances  vary  greatly 
with  the surface  of the  road  (whether  it’s  pavement 
or  gravel); the condition  of the  road  (wet,  dry,  icy); 
tire tread; the condition 
of your  brakes;  the  weight  of 
the vehicle  and the amount  of brake  force  applied. 
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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 Brake System (ABS) 
Your vehicle  may have anti-lock  brakes. ABS is an 
advanced electronic braking system that will help  prevent  a braking  skid. 
If your  vehicle has anti-lock 
brakes,  this warning light 
on the instrument panel will 
come on  briefly when 
you  start  your vehicle. 
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  or pulses a little. 
This  is  normal. 
4-7