Ernest Marsh wrote:
Oscar wrote:
I've got a 307, and as Ernie will probably confirm, the horn is a waste of time! If you need to use it, by the time it sounds the moment has passed.
Stupid French electronics.

They DO have a horn? I thought it was just a symbol somebody had forgotten to file off the mould!
A bit like the vacant space in the light cluster where my front fogs SHOULD be, but are not fitted!
My 406 had a horn which could be played with finesse - the merest prod of the steering boss produced an equally brief toot - so much that pedestrians would not be certain you had used it - but the 307 needs a mallet to set it off!
Same thing stops you from briefly flashing main beam when you have low beam selected. I think Mole has an explanation!
Ah yes! The current bain of my life - the Peugeot "CAN" electrical system!
In order to save a mountain of wiring (and enable the car to do fancy tricks like varying the delay of the intermittent wipe with road speed and flicking the rear wiper when you engage reverse in the rain), many manufacturers are going over to a multiplexed wiring system. Peugeot's is the "CAN" system. Here, there is a sort of "ring main" right round the car and EVERYTHING (I exaggerate slightly) is connected to it. Each "thing" has a receiver built into it and each switch has a transmitter. So, when you turn the sidelights on, the transmitter in the switch sends a signal down the "ring main" which only the sidelights will respond to. They then start drawing power from the system. When you switch off, the opposite happens.
I don't know about the 307 but I guess it's similar architecture to other current Peugeots. If that's the case, there will be a high priority CAN system (for things like fuel injection and ABS) and a low priority one for things like courtesy lights. Now I'd have though the horn would be on the high priority system but I guess that since the French never seem to use their horns for less than 30 seconds at a time, a bit of a delay is neither here nor there!
What winds me up is that unlike the old-fashioned "analogue" systems where you could give the slightest "pip" so as not to make a nuisance of yourself. With a "digital" system, of course, the contact you make with the horn push doesn't actually send power to the horn. It sends power to the CAN controller. This then tells the horn to work. The very slight "pip" you give on the horn gets translated as a signal to the horn to work for the shortest amount of time that the controller can make it work. This (at least on my car) is longer than I would normally want - but only by a bit.