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07-05-2024, 11:56 AM | #67 |
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The EU is moving to mandatory speed limiters that read roadside speed limit signs. I'm not sure if these devices actually slow the car down or just send a warning. Any of you Euro drivers know more about this?
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07-05-2024, 01:22 PM | #68 |
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07-05-2024, 01:25 PM | #69 | |
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07-05-2024, 09:01 PM | #71 |
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I think the worst part about ABS is that it kicks back at you. Some drivers take that as a reason to remove their foot from the brake pedal. Plus, in the early days of ABS, it would activate on all four wheels even if only one was skidding. I had a rear wheel drive pickup truck that would lock up the rear wheels in the rain with almost any pressure on the brakes. That caused the ABS to keep the front wheels spinning when they were nowhere near the limits of traction. I once had to stop for a school bus that cut across in front of me and my truck just slowly rolled into the side of the bus, even though I should have had plenty of room to stop. It was almost comical how slowly but persistently my truck was moving even with full pressure on the brakes. It just refused to stop. The front brakes were rendered practically useless by the ABS.
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vreihen1620528.00 |
07-05-2024, 11:08 PM | #72 | |
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07-06-2024, 08:01 AM | #73 |
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My biggest gripe is mechanical systems turned electronic without automation. Converting a mechanical system to an electronic button only detracts from the usability, but not adding any automation to it is absurd.
Good example of switching to electronic control are choke, wipers, even windows (as it allows the driver to control all windows in the car and you can do auto-raise/lower). Bad examples are electronic parking brake (unless the car automatically sets it on P and releases on R/D, which many cars don't, and is entirely inappropriate on a manual transmission car) and the worst offender - electronic door handles. My wife's C8 Corvette turned opening a door into a three stage operation - press the button, pause, pull/push the door open. For the life of me I can't understand who thinks electronic door handles are a good or luxurious thing. You want luxury on a door handle? Make it out of wood or metal, make the tactile feel nice and solid, take pains to make sure that the motion of the lever is inline with the swing of the door. Or make it electronic and actually automate it (like the electric operated 7-series doors that close when you press the brake (but make them works predictably every time), or like minivan sliding doors). Luckily my BRZ is completely manual, and the E93 I'm looking to buy doesn't have all that fluff either. |
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07-06-2024, 10:03 AM | #74 | |
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07-06-2024, 11:25 AM | #75 |
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07-06-2024, 01:39 PM | #76 |
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I had owned my GLC300 less than a week when the ignition switch failed. Because the parking brake is dependent on the ignition switch, the parking brake wouldn't release. And MB decided to *not* include an override. So all four wheels were locked in place. How ridiculous is that? The dealer sent out a flatbed to retrieve my vehicle and I told them they needed four dollies to move the car. Of course the flatbed shows up with just one dolly. The driver had to drag my car onto the flatbed. Thankfully, I was at home and not parked in some garage at the airport. That would have been a nightmare.
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07-06-2024, 02:16 PM | #78 | |
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07-06-2024, 02:20 PM | #79 |
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07-06-2024, 03:29 PM | #80 | |
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A TPMS would have saved me a blowout at 75mph on my left rear tire some yeas back; and I do mean blowout. There was about a 3"X1" chunk of the inner sidewall missing. Had the car been equipped with a TPMS I would have seen the pressure going down and stopped before the tire needed replacement. |
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07-06-2024, 03:46 PM | #81 |
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I think it was Car and Driver who reported a number of years ago that it was dynamic stability control systems that led to a significant reduction in accidents and injuries.
This after airbags and ABS failed to live up to the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety's expectations.
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07-06-2024, 06:05 PM | #82 |
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Every time I have a discussion with someone about ABS I find they have assumed an ABS vehicle stops shorter than one without. They do not understand that it was designed to allow you to still have some steering control even if you are standing on the brakes.
If you look at the physics of it, a vehicle with completely locked wheels should stop shorter than one with ABS, because it spends more time (wheels always locked) with friction between the tires and the ground. However, in many cases the vehicle also starts to skid sideways, and trying to correct with the steering wheel has zero effect when the wheels are locked. |
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07-06-2024, 06:38 PM | #83 |
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Back when driver side airbags were first coming onto the market, consumer safety publications were taking points off of cars that did not have the horn activated by pushing in on the airbag just like pushing in on the padded steering wheel hub in pre-airbag cars.
I will let everyone stop for a minute and think about what happens to the driver's hands and arms if they see the impending collision and are sounding their horn when the airbag deploys? BMW is among the manufacturers with this unsafe arrangement: .
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07-07-2024, 12:48 AM | #84 |
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