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When I lift my foot off the throttle pedal the car slows down more rapidly than a non hybrid due to regenerative braking.
Moving the selector from D to B one can achieve much greater retardation through an enhanced regenerative process.
All well and good as regards fuel economy but neither function appears to activate the rear brake lights such that a driver following would be missing the required visual cue.
the pedal is interpreted as an absolute speed suggestion and not a throttle (power suggestion). This interpretation lets you maintain more constant speed over small hills without so much reaction required at the pedal.
In Ireland when changing down in a manual the recommended method is to lightly touch the brakes
[ These days Her = His
but neither function appears to activate the rear brake lights...
Definitely safer if the car behind knows you are slowing down.
Did anyone ever check whether the introduction of brake lights resulted in people following closer behind the car in front?
Maybe it's a rate thing? Is there a standard set by the industry to address this? ie slow down at more than a specific rate and that's regarded as "braking" and needs a warning light?
My car (fully EV, Polestar 2) can be set to one pedal or two pedal driving; the former makes maximum use of regenerative breaking and I barely need to use the brakes.
That indeed is a possible unintended consequence- whether it has been researched, I do not know.
As they have been mandatory for about 100 years it would be difficult to disentangle this hypothesis from the statistics of increased traffic density, increased speeds, mandatory speed limits, improved tyre treads, and brakes that actually work.
My car (fully EV, Polestar 2) can be set to one pedal or two pedal driving; the former makes maximum use of regenerative breaking and I barely need to use the brakes. It definitely puts the brake lights on in this mode.
Another note: How efficient is regenerative braking. How much energy is lost regenerating and then re-accelerating? How can an EV get decent range if it cannot just coast and allow a minor variation in speed?
I recently spoke to a guy on Twitter who designed side-impact protection for cars, so I asked him if there was any evidence that SIP had saved any lives. He didn't have an answer, and the more I pressed him the more he squirmed.