Cerebus wrote: ↑Sat May 11, 2024 5:53 pm
bd139 wrote: ↑Sat May 11, 2024 3:36 pm
Cerebus wrote: ↑Sat May 11, 2024 12:42 pm
The downside, compared to using it in two pedal mode, is that you lose control of your brake light as a deliberate signal and you don't know how enthusiastic the car is in putting the brake light on for what would be in a conventional setup mild engine braking. In some EVs it can result in your brake lights flickering as if you're a jumpy idiot who keeps hopping between brake and accelerator - something which I take as a warning sign when I notice drivers doing it.
Meh don't drive up my arse and don't find out
It's got nothing to do with driving up anybody's arse but about what you're communicating to other drivers - brake lights are as much a signal as indicators are. Use them well and you help other drivers, badly and you confuse them (and some are bloody easy to confuse). I don't like the idea of abrogating control of them to the car.
Back in the day, we drove manual gearbox cars, & the mantra was "The essence of driving with a manual is to be in the right gear at all times".
To this end, when, for instance, we were stopping for a red traffic light, we would change down through the gears, so that if the light went green, we would be in the correct gear to drive smoothly away, & if we had to stop would be in first gear when it went green.
People were prepared for cars to slow down without brakelights appearing, so didn't "run up your bum".
Over time, with the proliferation of automatics, people need the crutch of seeing brakelights at all times, so last time I regularly drove a manual, I found myself deliberately making light applications of the brakes---just enough to turn the brakelights on, so as not to be rear ended.
Another really weird thing has happened, where driving instructors teach students of manuals to slow with the brakes on the "bollocksy" premise that "brakes are cheaper than gears" (how often did people fix their gears back in the day?)
As a result we get people slowing right down & stopping in top gear, which sort of works for a traffic light that stays red, but if it goes green before they have stopped, they either scrabble around trying to change down multiple gears, or go lurching off in top.
Meanwhile the auto drivers are "just about in their back seat".