PONTIAC PONTIAC 1995 Owners Manual
Manufacturer: PONTIAC, Model Year: 1995, Model line: PONTIAC, Model: PONTIAC PONTIAC 1995Pages: 354, PDF Size: 17.27 MB
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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,  you  should 
replace it. 
Check 
every once in a  while  to  be  sure  the mast  is still 
tightened  to the fender. 
Power  Antenna  Mast  Care 
Your power  antenna  will  look its best and  work  well  if 
it’s  cleaned  from time to time. 
TO clean the  antenna 
mast: 
1. Turn on  the  ignition  and radio  to raise  the  antenna. 
2. Dampen  a clean cloth  with  mineral  spirits or 
equivalent solvent. 
3. Wipe .e cloth  over the mast  sections,  removing  any 
4. Wipe dry with a clean  cloth. 
dirt. 
5. Make the  antenna  go up  and  down by turning  the 
radio  or ignition  off  and  on. 
6. Then  repeat if necessary. 
I NOTICE: 
Don’t lubricate  the  power  antenna.  Lubrication 
could  damage 
it. 
1 NOTICE: 
Before  entering  an  automatic  car  wash, turn off 
your  radio  to  make  the  power  antenna  go down. 
This  will prevent  the  mast  from  possibly getting 
damaged.  If  the  antenna  does not go down  when 
you  turn  the  radio 
off, it may  be damaged  or 
need  to be  cleaned.  In either  case, lower  the 
antenna  by hand  by carefully  pressing  the 
antenna 
down. 
If  the  mast  portion  of your  antenna  is damaged,  you  can 
easily  replace it. See  your retailer  for a replacement  kit 
and  follow  the instructions  in the kit. 
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Steering  Wheel Touch Controls 
(Option) 
You can  control  certain  audio  system  functions  using  the 
buttons  on your  steering  wheel. 
VOLUME: Press  the  up or down  arrows  to  increase  or 
decrease  volume. 
PLAY: Press  to play  the CD or  cassette  instead of the 
radio. 
MUTE: Press  to  silence  the  system.  Press  again  to  turn 
on  the  sound. 
SEEK: Press  the  up  or down  arrows  to  tune  to  the  next 
or  previous  radio station. 
If a  tape  or  compact  disc  is 
playing,  the  player  will  advance  or rewind. 
PRESET Press  to  play  a  station  you  have  programmed 
on  the  radio  preset  buttons. 
AM FM: Press  to  choose AM, FM1 or FM2. If a  tape  or 
compact  disc is playing,  it will  stop  and  the  radio  will 
Play- 
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NOTES 
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Section 4 Your  Driving  and  the  Road 
Here you’ll find information about driving on different 
kinds  of roads  and  in  varying  weather  conditions. We’ve 
also included  many other useful  tips on driving. 
Defensive  Driving 
The  best advice anyone can give about driving is: Drive 
defensively. 
Please start  with a 
very important safety device  in  your 
Pontiac:  Buckle  up.  (See “Safety  Belts” in  the Index.) 
Defensive driving  really  means  “be  ready  for anything.” 
On  city streets, rural  roads, or freeways, 
it means 
“always  expect the  unexpected.” 
Assume  that  pedestrians or other drivers are  going 
to be 
careless  and  make  mistakes.  Anticipate what  they  might 
do. Be  ready for their mistakes. 
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. 
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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, some 18,000  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 
2 1, 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 solve  this  bghway safety  problem 
is  for  people  never  to 
drink alcohol  and  then  drive.  But 
what 
if people  do? How  much  is “too much” if the 
driver  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: 
0 How  much  alcohol  consumed 
0 The drinker’s  body  weight 
0 The  amount of food  that  is consumed  before  and 
during  drinking 
consume  the  alcohol 
The  length  of time  it .has  taken  the  drinker to 
According  to  the American  Medical Association,  a 
180-pound  (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. 
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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  many 
U.S. states sets  the legal limit  at  a  BAC 
of  0.10 percent.  In 
a growing  number  of U.S. states,  and 
throughout  Canada,  the  limit is 
0.08 percent.  In  some 
other  countries  it’s  even  lower.  The BAC  limit for  all 
commercial  drivers in  the 
U.S. 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. 
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  BAG  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 twelve  times  greater; 
at  a level  of 0.15  percent,  the  chance  is  twenty-five 
times  greater 
! 
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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. 
‘‘I’ll 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. 
There’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. 
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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. 
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  (100 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;  and  the  condition 
of your  brakes. 
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. 
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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. 
Bnti-Lock  Brakes  (Option) 
:f your  Pontiac  has  anti-lock  brakes  (ABS),  it has  an 
dvanced  electronic  braking  system  that  will  help 
Irevent  a  braking  skid. 
If your  vehicle  has  anti-lock  brakes,  the  brake  pedal  will 
;ay 
so. 
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I 
260L 0 0 instrument  panel  will come 
And  this 
light on  the 
R p M x1 000 on  briefly  when  you  start 
your  vehicle. 
When  you start  your  vehicle,  or when  you  begin  to drive 
away,  you may  hear  a  momentary  motor  or  clicking 
noise.  And  you  may  even  notice  that  your  brake  pedal  moves  a  little while  this is going  on. 
This is the  ABS 
system  testing itself. 
If there’s  a  problem  with  the 
anti-lock  brake  system,  the  anti-lock  brake  system 
warning  light will stay  on  or  flash. 
See  “Anti-Lock  Brake  System  Warning  Light”  in  the 
Index.  Here’s  how  anti-lock  works.  Let’s  say  the  road 
is wet. 
You’re  driving  safely.  Suddenly  an  animal  jumps out 
in 
front of  you. 
You  slam  on  the  brakes.  Here’s  what  happens  with 
ABS. 
A  computer  senses  that  wheels are slowing  down.  If  one 
of  the  wheels  is about 
to stop  rolling,  the  computer  will 
separately  work  the  brakes  at  each front wheel  and  at  the 
rear  wheels. 
~~ 
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