Thereunto ago

The scary thought that your best chance in that case is to somehow flip your vehicle.

TheFritoBandito ago

I used to have a '92 Jeep Wrangler with minimal electronics. The ECM was mainly there for monitoring and controlling the engine performance. The throttle is cable operated direct to the throttle body and transmission was manual. If the throttle got stuck wide open, I could mash the clutch or throw it into neutral. The parking brake was a backup emergency brake if needed. I had an older Chevy C10 with the same mechanical fail safes so to speak.

Fast forward to today and well, if the ECM decides to go nuts with wide open throttle, you're lucky to get it into neutral, pulled off the road and shut off. Most people don't realize if you panic and turn the key all the way off, the column locks, then you're really screwed. One turn back to aux / accessory is what you need to kill the engine and maintain control and bring it to a stop.

I'm not sure about the latest vehicles with key fobs. I believe they won't allow you to kill the engine by pressing the start button, at least not at speeds above 10 MPH? Some guy on YouTube did a test of that and I'm pretty sure the button did nothing. In that case, all you can do is rely on the brake pedal and emergency brake.

Then there's the Teslas and other vehicles with the remote monitoring / diagnostic BS. I read an article years ago about some hackers managing to get access to a newer Jeep Cherokee remotely via laptop. It was just a test just to prove it was possible to do something malicious by remote methods.

None of this is going to improve or get any better in the future. The governments of the world want people out of their personal vehicles and into public transportation or some other self driving, ride sharing bullshit. Because, 'muh carbon tax.