The engine, fuel delivery, ABS, lighting could be.
Check the vacuum system on the car an at the transmission. If the car is computer controlled, check the computer codes for a possible problem.
Allowing that we are talking about a computer controlled car. The danger is that it may not realise it has a fault and cause an accident. Machines are only as good as the designer. That being said once we have changed over to computer controlled automobiles it will be much safer to ride in a car.
If you have a very old car with the early Bosch J or K series injection there is a mixture adjustment screw in the air flow meter area, usually hidden by a plug. Newer computer controlled systems require a reprogram of the computer or a repair of the underlying problem.
yes, the regenerative braking is controlled by an on board computer, so is charging.
That depends on the year, make, model, etc of the car. On most late model vehicles, yes, the trans is computer controlled.
You can monitor some alarm systems with your phone or your computer.
No car today has a governor. RPM is computer controlled. The RPM on the Celica is controlled at the red line spec for the engine. Speed has nothing to do with the computer control--it is the RPM.
If you have a modern car, then the only device you will need is a car diagnostic computer scan. The scan will look at all the computer systems in your car and see if they have logged any issues with your car.
This car is not built with one, that function is done by the computer controlled fuel injection system.
I think you mean a clutch, and yes, all cars have clutches. in an automatic car, the clutch is controlled by the computer, just like the shifts.
Your car seems to be getting too much fuel, is it computer controlled?
the computer is what runs the car and all the engine functions, you can change the functions of the engine to get more power by buying a performance programmer and downloading the program into the cars computer. theres your answer :)