Lets have a poll amongst auto drivers....who L foot brakes? not me.
Nor me in normal driving including maneuvers, but i have used the technique on extreme inclines with mm to spare in my previous work.
I would be nothing short of a menace out on the road if i tried, and as its impossible to do so in a lorry due to the steering column it would be doubly silly to try.
Edited by gordonbennet on 10/01/2020 at 14:30
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This thread isn't about left foot braking though - its about having a system built in to prevent high speed reversing.
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This thread isn't about left foot braking though - its about having a system built in to prevent high speed reversing.
Carry on putting safety systems in a motor and we wont be driving anymore, so common sense should be used, but accidents happen even with SS involved, so unless we want fully autonomous vehicles then those that are not able to control vehicles properly should be taken off the road
but its not that simple is it
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This thread isn't about left foot braking though - its about having a system built in to prevent high speed reversing.
This may seem a good idea for some, maybe even most, but having reverse gear limited to 5mph would cause folk that live and/or work in rural areas plenty of angst. If you often travel on single track roads, like myself, coming upon someone who has just passes a passing place, but is obviously hopeless at reversing, means that to save time i reverse back 100 metres, sometimes more, to 'my' last passing place. If i had to do this at 5mph, it would be very annoying!.
As an aside, one of my Dad's old cars was an (almost) forgotten Dutch oddity, a DAF 55 (yes, the same company that makes trucks). This had an early CVT transmission and could, in theory, go as fast backwards as it could forwards. In the case of my Dad's one (55 was approximately the horsepower from the 1.1 Renault engine) would mean 80(ish)mph...............!
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This thread isn't about left foot braking though - its about having a system built in to prevent high speed reversing.
As an aside, one of my Dad's old cars was an (almost) forgotten Dutch oddity, a DAF 55 (yes, the same company that makes trucks). This had an early CVT transmission and could, in theory, go as fast backwards as it could forwards. In the case of my Dad's one (55 was approximately the horsepower from the 1.1 Renault engine) would mean 80(ish)mph...............!
I had two Daf 55s and confirm they would reverse as fast as they'd go forward. A lad I knew slightly tried reverse top speed in his on a private road and ended in the ditch at 50+ mph.
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It's surprising just how fast some TC autos can reverse too, my own Mk3 Zodiac ended its life on the banger track, it had lost all forward drive after several meetings so i reversed it on its last race, where for a couple of circuits it could keep up with most.
Best of all though was around 1984 in the days of the convoys of Transits full of coppers sent to maintain peace (or beat the opposition, depending on your point of view) during the miner's strike, i was travelling at around a steady 60/65mph up around Yorkshire on one the motorways and realised that a police Granada on the other carriageway hard shoulder was pacing me, if not actually overtaking me whilst reversing, impressive to maintain that control with a rear steer vehicle but those square Granadas were exceptionally stable on the road...my own square Granada of the time was a 2.5 NA Diesel which would take probably 45 seconds to reach 60 going forwards :-)
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I had two Daf 55s and confirm they would reverse as fast as they'd go forward. A lad I knew slightly tried reverse top speed in his on a private road and ended in the ditch at 50+ mph.
You are probably aware then of the Dutch reverse racing scene, which became dominated by the little Daf's (which had a very unfair advantage!). Here is a little taster,
www.youtube.com/watch?v=lLgPTJWAysY
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Far less tragic results, but this thread reminds me of the last time my wife sat behind the wheel of a car, in our late, unlamented Meriva 1.6 Easytronic.
She'd avoided taking the wheel for several months, having done little but complain about me not buying a manual so she could drive it. So I said come out, give it a try. First set of red lights we got to she hit the brake thinking she was dipping the clutch and nearly sent me through the windscreen. After a bit of shouting and finger wagging on both our parts, it was decided that she wouldn't drive that car again. That was in 2008 and she hasn't taken the wheel since, though I keep her on the insurance just in case, and because it probably lowers the premium a bit.
I love autos and will probably buy another one soon, but I can well understand how easily someone who has driven nothing but a manual for years and who switches to an auto without a bit of practice could have a near miss, or something worse.
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"You are probably aware then of the Dutch reverse racing scene, which became dominated by the little Daf's (which had a very unfair advantage!). Here is a little taster,
www.youtube.com/watch?v=lLgPTJWAysY"
Daftest, funniest thing I've seen.
Edited by FP on 11/01/2020 at 14:31
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those square Granadas were exceptionally stable on the road...my own square Granada of the time was a 2.5 NA Diesel which would take probably 45 seconds to reach 60 going forwards :-)
I had one, an '84 2.8 auto. Apart from the frightening thirst, I can't think of anything I didn't like about it. A motorised sofa, exceptionally easy to drive. OK they didn't handle but the ride quality was something else.
I can't see what the problem is changing from manual to auto. I only once did the brake thing with the insensitive clutch foot standing the car on it's nose, but it doesn't take long to get used to it.
I look at motorbikes and think that I would have a problem trying to jostle with feet/hands controlling gears/clutch/throttle/rear brake/front brake but I guess that's the amazing thing about the brain, it adapts more quickly than you think.
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I still can't get my head around what all fuss is about, or why the dogma from either side. I use either foot to brake in an auto, seems pretty obvious to me that's why the brake pedal is wider in an auto, so it can be easily accessed by either foot.
If I'm doing any close parking or whatever, I'll use my left foot on the brake but if I'm just bowling along I'll use my right foot just as I would in a manual.
Can't understand what's supposed to be difficult about either technique to be honest. It's just about operating a machine with relatively simple and standardised controls after all.
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Can't understand what's supposed to be difficult about either technique to be honest. It's just about operating a machine with relatively simple and standardised controls after all.
Suppose the difference is you drive thousands of miles a week, and have done so for years, and driving obviously comes naturally to you, arguably you are a professional driver and take it all as it comes.
The people being discussed here are not only generally lower mileage drivers, but are in their dotage too, driving probably doesn't come naturally to them and that goes for thousands of drivers of all ages who we witness every day of the week, don't suppose i'll be getting any better behind the wheel when i'm in me 80's either, not as us of the pleb class will be allowed to drive in our 80's by the time i get there.
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I use either foot to brake in an auto, seems pretty obvious to me that's why the brake pedal is wider in an auto, so it can be easily accessed by either foot.
Well i guess that depends on your point of view. To me, it seems obvious that the reason the brake pedal is narrower in a manual car is because there needs to be room for the clutch pedal.
I am 48 and been driving for just over 30 years now. Passed my test on a manual, but started having to drive auto's through my work at the age of 18. I have never had any issues switching between manual and auto, but i guess that may be because i started driving auto's at a fairly young age. But having said that, i persuaded an elderly (late 60's) female customer of mine to try going auto. As far as i know, she has had no issues changing from manual to auto, and she now finds driving much more enjoyable as a result. My mother in law also went auto late (mid 60's), just last year when she took the plunge and bought a Hyundai i10 auto. Again, as far as i know, she has had no issues changing from maual to auto and again, she now finds driving more enjoyable.
Left foot braking is something i have never considered because i have never come to a point in my life where i only ever drove auto. If that were to happen, i might try it to see how i got on. But while i am still driving manual more than 50% of the time, i don't think it would be wise to try and learn myself to left foot brake when driving the car!.
But that is just me, and we are all different!
Edited by badbusdriver on 11/01/2020 at 11:33
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<< The people being discussed here are not only generally lower mileage drivers, but are in their dotage too, driving probably doesn't come naturally to them and that goes for thousands of drivers of all ages who we witness every day of the week, >>
I find that suggestion rather too dismissive. I am a recently qualified octogenarian, but I don't think I have reached the dotage stage yet. Driving has 'come naturally' for almost 60 years. The problem for some may be that driving conditions - and the vehicles - have changed radically since those basic habits were learnt, and we all know how hard it can be to teach old dogs ....
Another thing which has changed is makers' approach, from designing vehicles fit for purpose, to fashion articles out from which it has became so hard to see that multiple cameras are needed to fill the gap. I could go on ...
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Another thing which has changed is makers' approach, from designing vehicles fit for purpose, to fashion articles out from which it has became so hard to see that multiple cameras are needed to fill the gap. I could go on ...
Andrew you're hardly the type pf person to change over to an auto and mow down pedestrians like skittles, because yes driving does come naturally to you as it does to Alby, for many others it doesn't, and it doesn't help sometimes with the types of car people buy themselves, yes umpteen NCAP stars are worth having but if there's so much fashionable bodywork and so little visibility that it makes an accident more likely what's the point.
Though i could not agree more with you about the types of cars being sold these days, seldom thankfully do i drive any of the latest models any more, if i do they tend to be company Focus, which is a prime example of what is now a large car with no room inside, with massive blind spots and typically useless door mirrors that appear to be primarily fashion accessories, and i do not get the hype about how wonderful they are, you couldn't pay me enough.
You only have to go back a few years and remember all those smashing little squarish cars, with huge windows and fairly narrow pillars, they were a joy to park, and not an automated manual courtesy of satan to be found.
As for dotage i'm still yet to retire but feeling dotage heading my way rather too rapidly already :-)
Edited by gordonbennet on 11/01/2020 at 16:07
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<< a prime example of what is now a large car with no room inside, with massive blind spots and typically useless door mirrors that appear to be primarily fashion accessories, >>
Actually I think today's (or at least last decade's) door mirrors are pretty good. I can just remember the days when cars began to get mirrors at the top of the offside wing, just over the headlamp. They were too far away to offer much of a view. Many cars had only a modest interior mirror.
With mirrors on both doors, closer to the driver's eye, reverse parking into marked spaces is fairly easy (tho probably a long way from that achieved by drivers of artics). To join our main street it is necessary to emerge from a slip-entry on the 'wrong side', often with a largish vehicle blocking the view of approaching traffic, while also trying to see traffic climbing the hill on the other side. By turning the nearside mirror outwards the latter problem can be largely alleviated.
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If I'm doing any close parking or whatever, I'll use my left foot on the brake but if I'm just bowling along I'll use my right foot just as I would in a manual. Can't understand what's supposed to be difficult about either technique to be honest. It's just about operating a machine with relatively simple and standardised controls after all.
Only drive an auto if I have to. Last one was a hire car in US but occasionally drove parents autos from late seventies until Mum gave up driving c2008. Same approach as above. Occasional use of left foot perhaps in close quarter/slow moves and circs where I'd finesse with clutch in a manual. Under way left foot gets stowed and just use right.
That's normal and what is generally recommended. Issue I think is where a few dogmatically assert that it's BETTER to use left foot all time in an auto. I regard that as arrant nonsense; none of us trained our left foot for the required sensitivity - as I proved when accidentally LFB on Houston Airport car park after picking up hire car and testing Mrs B's seat belt!!
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I thought HJ advocates left foot braking at low speeds only, when parking ect..
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"But that is just me, and we are all different!"
You are so right, BBD, and that has got to be the point. A prime example of that is the enduring popularity of manual transmissions, which isn't just down to the price difference, a small fraction of the total price of a car. SWMBO has never liked automatics, and personally I'm glad that we have one of each.
Because we're all different, we should be able to disagree about issues like LFB, as Alby says, without fuss. I can absolutely see the logic of LFB if, unlike me, you only drive automatics: but for me personally (and I mean personally) even with an auto it would take me longer to move my left foot from the footrest to the brake than it does my right foot from the accelerator. To get the benefit of LFB I'd need to drive with my left foot poised near the brake (as one well might in a parking manoeuvre)....but that's just me.
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... but for me personally (and I mean personally) even with an auto it would take me longer to move my left foot from the footrest to the brake than it does my right foot from the accelerator. To get the benefit of LFB I'd need to drive with my left foot poised near the brake (as one well might in a parking manoeuvre)....but that's just me.
100% agree Avant, and the assertion that LFB "eliminates thinking distance" is clearly nonsense, not only because of the response being faster moving foot from accelerator to brake pedal, but because "thinking distance" is a measure of the distance travelled between observing an obstacle and making the decision to react by stamping on the brake, irrespective of which pedals are in use.
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... but for me personally (and I mean personally) even with an auto it would take me longer to move my left foot from the footrest to the brake than it does my right foot from the accelerator. To get the benefit of LFB I'd need to drive with my left foot poised near the brake (as one well might in a parking manoeuvre)....but that's just me.
100% agree Avant, and the assertion that LFB "eliminates thinking distance" is clearly nonsense, not only because of the response being faster moving foot from accelerator to brake pedal, but because "thinking distance" is a measure of the distance travelled between observing an obstacle and making the decision to react by stamping on the brake, irrespective of which pedals are in use.
iirc, brake assist does away with thinking time, in that when your foot is removed from accelerator and hits the brake pedal, the time taken is measured by computer and the pressure on the foot pedal is amplified giving faster braking with more brake pressure applied
so it wont matter what foot it is!
Though have to admit I used LFB in a garage to park Autos but they never had Brake assist then....
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iirc, brake assist does away with thinking time, in that when your foot is removed from accelerator and hits the brake pedal, the time taken is measured by computer and the pressure on the foot pedal is amplified giving faster braking with more brake pressure applied
so it wont matter what foot it is!
I think that you don't fully understand the concept of thinking time . It is the period before actual braking input ( that time to perceive, recognise & react).
Brake assist doesn't do away with thinking time but should reduce the braking distance.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emergency_brake_assist
My current car has Brake Assist as part of it's Pre-Collision System (if I don't brake at all PCS should). Thankfully not been called upon yet. ;)
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I think that you don't fully understand the concept of thinking time . It is the period before actual braking input ( that time to perceive, recognise & react).
My point - but it seems that bolt isn't the only one who has an alternative concept of thinking time
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I think that you don't fully understand the concept of thinking time . It is the period before actual braking input ( that time to perceive, recognise & react).
My point - but it seems that bolt isn't the only one who has an alternative concept of thinking time
I only mentioned what a computer would be doing and does, that thinking time could be the difference between life and death, which as far as braking goes, the computer reaction to what you dont do is faster and more effective, whether people like it or not it works and quicker than anyone can do
I understand people dont like change, though, it isn't taking anything away from the driver just adding to the drivers ability
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I only mentioned what a computer would be doing and does, that thinking time could be the difference between life and death, which as far as braking goes, the computer reaction to what you dont do is faster and more effective, whether people like it or not it works and quicker than anyone can do
My recently acquired Fabia has forward looking 'radar' that will sound an alarm then brake to avoid what it's logic thinks is an imminent collision.
A week or two before Christmas cars in front of me slowed while my 'scan' was looking further up road. Not really an issue, a slight panic and firmer than usual braking and I'd have caught it and still stopped a car length short. The downside of keeping a scan and looking well ahead is that you might be slightly slower catching something close by.
The auto brake was on the case before me - full application up to ABS.
There's no way a collision was actually going to happen but obviously the logic doesn't know that. It's beeped at me on several other occasions, including on the test drive. TBH I don't like it but I'm equally wary of turning it off as the law of sodde says I'll then rear end somebody!!
Edited by Bromptonaut on 12/01/2020 at 09:39
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I only mentioned what a computer would be doing and does, that thinking time could be the difference between life and death, which as far as braking goes, the computer reaction to what you dont do is faster and more effective, whether people like it or not it works and quicker than anyone can do
My recently acquired Fabia has forward looking 'radar' that will sound an alarm then brake to avoid what it's logic thinks is an imminent collision.
A week or two before Christmas cars in front of me slowed while my 'scan' was looking further up road. Not really an issue, a slight panic and firmer than usual braking and I'd have caught it and still stopped a car length short. The downside of keeping a scan and looking well ahead is that you might be slightly slower catching something close by.
The auto brake was on the case before me - full application up to ABS.
There's no way a collision was actually going to happen but obviously the logic doesn't know that. It's beeped at me on several other occasions, including on the test drive. TBH I don't like it but I'm equally wary of turning it off as the law of sodde says I'll then rear end somebody!!
I think it may depend on system used but, afaia, the scans are around 1000 times a second, so distance wont matter, the system knows whats happening and will ready brakes.
if you try to brake fast ie its the ABS that does the work and moves the pads closer to the discs, without touching, so when you hit the pedal the pads are in contact with disc straight away and with most systems its impossible for you to hit another motor but not the other way round
if the same system was on older cars front and rear, it would be impossible to hit anyone or anything, the Civic will brake for deep grass if its in front of parking sensor and going too fast which in fields where boot fairs sometimes are, the bleeper is always going off, and for pedestrians
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if you try to brake fast ie its the ABS that does the work and moves the pads closer to the discs, without touching, so when you hit the pedal the pads are in contact with disc straight away and with most systems its impossible for you to hit another motor but not the other way round
This isn't how ABS works either ... 8-|
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I only mentioned what a computer would be doing and does, that thinking time could be the difference between life and death, which as far as braking goes, the computer reaction to what you dont do is faster and more effective, whether people like it or not it works and quicker than anyone can do
I understand people dont like change, though, it isn't taking anything away from the driver just adding to the drivers ability
Brake assist will not eliminate thinking time (a full pre-collision system may be faster to react & initiate braking than you are if you are daydreaming etc.).
Brake assist should only kick in if the system reckons that you are not braking hard enough i.e. you have already reacted so thinking time is already in the past.
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Brake assist will not eliminate thinking time (a full pre-collision system may be faster to react & initiate braking than you are if you are daydreaming etc.).
Brake assist should only kick in if the system reckons that you are not braking hard enough i.e. you have already reacted so thinking time is already in the past.
That would tally with my experience. The Skoda I reference above clearly has a collision avoidance system. Our other car, a Berlingo, only has brake assist. I've triggered that once in a distracted moment; full on ABS limited brake and the hazards come on too.
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Must stick up for us oldies! The only pedal confusion accident I've been anywhere near (car through a shop window) was caused by a young man who was well under forty years old.
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My current car has Brake Assist as part of it's Pre-Collision System (if I don't brake at all PCS should). Thankfully not been called upon yet. ;)
It works without you knowing it, as I said it times the reaction time between throttle off point and when the brake pedal is pressed, and you do know when it works because the brakes come on much heavier the faster you hit the brake pedal
so as for not been called upon yet, it has, but you've never noticed, called brake assist not anti collision though its part of the system
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Bolt, you seem to have a lot of faith in AEBS, having covered about 200k miles with these systems in my two most recent lorries, can't say i've found them to be anything but a pita, as have departure warnings, and the same opinion goes for most of my more experienced colleagues too, on my present vehicle AEBS cannot be turned off at all by the driver, which will be interesting if we get heavy snow.
Thankfully i get on very well with the lads at the service agent (maker's dealer) and they have reset the system so its not quite as keen to cut power or apply the brakes as it was previously.
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Bolt, you seem to have a lot of faith in AEBS, having covered about 200k miles with these systems in my two most recent lorries, can't say i've found them to be anything but a pita, as have departure warnings, and the same opinion goes for most of my more experienced colleagues too, on my present vehicle AEBS cannot be turned off at all by the driver, which will be interesting if we get heavy snow.
Thankfully i get on very well with the lads at the service agent (maker's dealer) and they have reset the system so its not quite as keen to cut power or apply the brakes as it was previously.
Please correct if wrong, but are you thinking of automatic braking which is connected to anti collision system
the anti collision system relies on forward and around cameras including lidar/radar that prevents collisions through the use of these devices
auto brake assist does not use these, the ecu measures the time it takes you to move your foot from the accelerator to touching the brake pedal, if this is timed as normal operation the brakes operate as standard
if the ECU detects faster time between the foot moving from acc pedal to brake, it gives harder braking instead of you pressing harder on the pedal
I think as you say I am confident in the way it works, but dont dwell on it while driving, if it works it works but I am prepared in case it doesn't as nothing is failsafe, I dont care what anyone says
I understand why people dont like it as well
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My current car has Brake Assist as part of it's Pre-Collision System (if I don't brake at all PCS should). Thankfully not been called upon yet. ;)
It works without you knowing it, as I said it times the reaction time between throttle off point and when the brake pedal is pressed, and you do know when it works because the brakes come on much heavier the faster you hit the brake pedal
No, that isn't how it works & my car would indicate to me if it had been called on (plus if it was necessary PCS should have cut in). I would also have noticed, as you mentioned, the braking being heavier than I had intended.
Perhaps, just perhaps, I am a decent driver who keeps a good level of observation & anticipates & reacts accordingly? Best thing that I ever did in my over 1,000,000 miles of driving was do (& pass) an HGV course which had a significant effect on my observation & anticipation.
Edited by Heidfirst on 12/01/2020 at 22:37
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No, that isn't how it works & my car would indicate to me if it had been called on
what had been called upon brake assist or anti collision?
How does it work as usually different makers give different names that mean the same thing?
Perhaps, just perhaps, I am a decent driver
I dont recall saying any different, and your not the only one, but were not perfect which is why these systems are there to assist
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... but for me personally (and I mean personally) even with an auto it would take me longer to move my left foot from the footrest to the brake than it does my right foot from the accelerator. To get the benefit of LFB I'd need to drive with my left foot poised near the brake (as one well might in a parking manoeuvre)....but that's just me.
100% agree Avant, and the assertion that LFB "eliminates thinking distance" is clearly nonsense, not only because of the response being faster moving foot from accelerator to brake pedal, but because "thinking distance" is a measure of the distance travelled between observing an obstacle and making the decision to react by stamping on the brake, irrespective of which pedals are in use.
I presume that's why HJ (at least i believe he did) originally said LFB was only for slow speed manouvring, so your left foot hovered over the brake pedal. For me, doing that for all other driving would be terribly uncomfortable, which is why any car I'd buy MUST have a foot rest for my left foot. I agree that moving it the distance from the foot rest to the brake pedal is greater than from the accelerator to the brake.
I think, as many others have said, the problem with such accidents lies with someone who, perhaps as a result of old age (though certainly not at a specific age or for everyone) and/or infirmity, confusion and a lack of co-ordination is the cause.
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I think, as many others have said, the problem with such accidents lies with someone who, perhaps as a result of old age (though certainly not at a specific age or for everyone) and/or infirmity, confusion and a lack of co-ordination is the cause.
reverse auto collision system would be handy for that, as I think some cars already have, maybe not too long before its standard, wouldn't need to think about LFB then
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That's the interesting thing, you are fine using either foot to brake, I am unable to get any feel or finesse with the left foot but naturally use the right. This has one small benefit as the r foot moving to to the brake from the accelerator removes any power going to the engine. Other fields have the same natural anomalies, watch an organist using both hands and feet at the same time and you can bet that they have individual ways of doing it for the same results.
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That's the interesting thing, you are fine using either foot to brake, I am unable to get any feel or finesse with the left foot but naturally use the right. This has one small benefit as the r foot moving to to the brake from the accelerator removes any power going to the engine. Other fields have the same natural anomalies, watch an organist using both hands and feet at the same time and you can bet that they have individual ways of doing it for the same results.
One thing I am not certain of is if anyone using LFB uses it on a motor with brake assist as it either confuses the ecu or works as standard, I can only assume it works as standard as preprogramed?
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"....watch an organist using both hands and feet at the same time and you can bet that they have individual ways of doing it for the same results."
Interesting thought. I use both feet when playing the organ; I also use both feet if I drive SWMBO's manual car....but only my right foot if I drive mine (DSG).
As I've said before, I see the point of LFB, particularly during manoeuvres when your left foot can be poised over the brake pedal: but because we have one of each I'm not going to try different techniques in different cars. Driving has to be instinctive, particularly for me after 55 years of right-foot braking!
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"....watch an organist using both hands and feet at the same time and you can bet that they have individual ways of doing it for the same results."
Interesting thought. I use both feet when playing the organ; I also use both feet if I drive SWMBO's manual car....but only my right foot if I drive mine (DSG).
Avant, rest assured I remain in awe (and with no small measure of envy chucked in for good measure) of your ability to play the organ.
Our weekly attendance at Buckfast Abbey provides (apart from the more conventionally anticipated benefits) a display of a man (it's almost invariably a man) in total and spectacular command of a truly breathtaking instrument that never, ever, fails to leave us genuinely taken aback ath the skill required to play it.
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Organists must have brains different from the rest of us, coordinating two hands playing independent parts on piano is amazing never mind the feet getting another part. What sort of drivers do organists make I wonder.
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from what I understand (& after some research) only some systems measure speed/time of accelerator lift off & pressing brake - most just measure the speed at which the brake pedal is depressed.
For those which do measure speed/time of accelerator lift off how that interacts with LFB is an interesting question.
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For those which do measure speed/time of accelerator lift off how that interacts with LFB is an interesting question.
Maybe you haven't read the posts, talk was of speed of moving left foot on an auto from rest point to brake pedal, which as some mentioned may be slower than moving the right foot to brake pedal.
Unless of course I got that wrong as usual.....
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My argument with the entire LFB concept is :
you still have the time delay from human reaction to moving left foot off floor to pedal to pressing pedal..
HJ claims LFB allows instant pedal access.
It does not...
Period.
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My argument with the entire LFB concept is :
you still have the time delay from human reaction to moving left foot off floor to pedal to pressing pedal..
HJ claims LFB allows instant pedal access.
It does not...
Period.
Yep I agree, even a computer is not instant, even if it is a fraction of a second delay its still not instant
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Losing control of an auto car (or a manual car for that matter) whilst executing a manoeuvre is not a subject for levity, but I did witness something related last September which was amusing, mainly because nobody was hurt.
We were at the annual flower show at the RHS, Wisley. Everybody was circulating between the displays and enjoying the warm weather and beautiful floral arrangements. All of a sudden there was a hell of a crash and a clatter and when we all had the courage to stop cowering and look up from where we had each become frozen to the spot, we saw that an elderly lady had ploughed into one of the stands in her mobility scooter. She had sent the display of shrubs and plants in all directions and demolished the makeshift counter of seed boxes stacked one on top of another and covered in that artificial grass roll commonly used for display purposes. Her daughter was screeching “Mum, Mum, put it in reverse!” which the confused looking Mum duly did, sending the scooter out from the tangled mass of display grass and seed boxes straight into the display set at right angles to the one she had just destroyed. Another crash and clatter.
The stall holders set about trying to salvage what they could of their stock and rebuilding their display whilst the daughter made a token attempt to help out accompanied by profuse apologies. The lady stall holder gave the daughter a look that said “You’ve done enough already!” and with that she and her Mum moved swiftly away from the scene in a vain attempt at face saving.
The shock of what all happened very quickly turned to faint amusement once everybody realised that nobody had been hurt. A few visitors also helped the stall holders rebuild their display. I overheard somebody say that Mum had been lent the mobility scooter by the organisers and she was unfamiliar with the controls. The stall holders resumed their previous good humour once the dust had settled and they had managed to re-establish something akin to their original set-up.
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