On Wed, 10 Apr 2002, dlrnjim wrote: > My car has low miles on it, and I'm assuming the cable's OK. Without knowing the history of the car (that is, *I* don't. Can't vouch for you. :) ), that is an unsafe assumption. * dons his paranoia hat * What if... * the car was stored outside, letting rain hit the cable, potentially causing it (or related components) to rust? * the car sat for years with no throttle cable movement? This may or may not cause problems (I have no idea if it would. Do you?) * somone accidentally misadjusted <insert throttle-related component here>, causing problems that only began to manifest in a noticable way now? * someone went at your car with evil intent and a hacksaw? Are any of these conditions likely? Nope. Possible? Maybe, maybe not. I'm sure those more in the know can come up with more plausible ways for your throttle cable to be bad. Short answer: if the cable hasn't been examined/replaced by you or someone you trust implicitly, it needs to be checked. This goes for any part of your car. Or your house. Or your internal organs. If your heart started racing for no apparant reason, would you assume that it wasn't the heart itself that was having problems just because you were 17 and you hadn't put many miles on it? :) Noah #2867, currently stranded in my garage on jackstands, 'cause my ex-roommate picked LAST NIGHT to repossess his floor jack. ARGH! Bottleneck Bob is riding fast Wanted by the law for the freight-train blast