The throttle is a potentiometer set that sends position signals to the ecm. Small movements of the pedal when one of the potentiometer tracks is starting to fail can result in a jerky throttle. Cruise control doesn't use the pedal potentiometer to maintain speed so can't be affected by a faulty track unless the pedal is pressed to accelerate to a speed faster than the CC set-speed causing acceleration can be jerky if still operating in the bad area of the track.
I had a manual TD5 D2 that developed a bad accelerometer track whilst driving around Canberra. The only way to avoid the engine fault was to quickly push the pedal past the bad spot then use CC once over 40 kph, which was a little tricky in Friday afternoon start-stop peak hour traffic.
I'm not surprised that CC wont operate with an engine inlet airflow / pressure plausibility fault which is what I expect the leaking hose was triggering.
MY21.5 L405 D350 Vogue SE with 19s. Produce LLAMS for LR/RR, Jeep GC/Dodge Ram
VK2HFG and APRS W1 digi, RTK base station using LoRa
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