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OT: The car in front is a Toyota


FridgeFreezer

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Seems after recalling 4.2 million cars they still got it wrong and have to recall another 2.4 million :blink: at least LR's only break down rather than actively trying to kill you :o

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/8482366.stm

Most worrying is that the brakes don't seem to be up to stopping them, which would seem to be something of an oversight.

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I thought it was a fundamental point of vehicle design that the engine couldn't overcome the brakes :unsure:

Also seems the clever electronics don't allow you to do things like shift the (auto) box into neutral or apply the (electric) handbrake when you're doing 90.

Been quite a lot of coverage on Risks digest, an experienced police driver & family were killed after trying just about everything to make the thing stop.

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I still cant see why you couldnt just turn the ignition off?

It would be completely crazy to design a car where the ignition couldnt be turned off on demand?!

Was a guy couple years ago who claimed his throttle was "stuck" in his BMW in the UK, and drove for miles down some motorway, before finally stacking it into a roundabout. He cooked the brakes trying to slow the car and for some retarded reason didnt turn the ignition off or knock the transmission into neutral.

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/article739808.ece

The police charged him but i dunno if he was convicted:

http://www.theregister.co.uk/2006/06/20/bmw_driver_arrest/

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I expect the brakes can stop the car, under full power, once. I've just finished bedding some new pads in and they do exceed the engine power in my MG, even in first gear.

However, if the panicked housewife at the wheel spends ten miles holding her speed down to a steady 50mph and THEN tries to stop, she might find that the brakes have stopped being able to dissipate heat any more - they're smoking strongly and badly faded, the smell's terrifying and NOW they won't stop her Jap SUV. That's my take on the whole thing.

It's a bad day in the design office when you make an announcement that knocks 5% off a global company's share price though... :rolleyes:

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I expect the brakes can stop the car, under full power, once. I've just finished bedding some new pads in and they do exceed the engine power in my MG, even in first gear.

However, if the panicked housewife at the wheel spends ten miles holding her speed down to a steady 50mph and THEN tries to stop, she might find that the brakes have stopped being able to dissipate heat any more - they're smoking strongly and badly faded, the smell's terrifying and NOW they won't stop her Jap SUV. That's my take on the whole thing.

It's a bad day in the design office when you make an announcement that knocks 5% off a global company's share price though... :rolleyes:

A 4 to 6 litre V8 coupled to an autobox and torque converter will be very hard to stop, don't forget no vacuum for the servo with wide open throttle either.

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Some people now design it so that if you hit the brake and throttle together, the brake is master and it cuts engine power (so no more left foot braking!). I guess that was not the case here.

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Some people now design it so that if you hit the brake and throttle together, the brake is master and it cuts engine power (so no more left foot braking!). I guess that was not the case here.

my audi had that feature was a right pig when trying to bed new pads in

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I've had the throttle stick open on me a couple of times. Both times I turned off the ignition to kill the engine. However, there was a time delay from WTF?!!! to turning the key. I was lucky that I wasn't in a situation where the time delay mattered.

I also remember a similar situation where I set off from my house, approached the T junction at the end of the road only to find an invisible force preventing my right foot moving from the throttle to the brake. I ended up stamping on the brake with my left foot but still stopped a few feet over the line with my arseh*le fluttering from half-a-crown to sixpence.

Turned out I'd trapped my shoelace in the door when I got in. :wacko:

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Turned out I'd trapped my shoelace in the door when I got in. :wacko:

Quick thinking. I've had something similar except i managed to free the correct foot. Not sure I’d be a cool as you but you never know.

The other week the accelerator peddle got stuck under the mat approaching the roundabout at the end of the road. It clutched with the left and lifted the accelerator with my right toe freeing it from the mat. Got out my Swiss army knife and rectified the mat in seconds and lobbed the piece in the back. Toyota should just issue Swiss army knifes.

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If you worked for a modern car dealership like I do, you'd wonder why anyone buys a new car.

The manufacturers supposedly spend millons on development only to have the things fall apart on the customers.

And I work for one of the better makes, reliability wise anyway.

Poor design, cheaply made, simulated testing that realy doesn't replicate real world use, no matter what they tell you.

The only way they can stay in business is by selling huge numbers of cars, buy a new car every year, throw away the old one. For this to work there has to be a constant change in the look of the car, the gadgets it has, the power, mpg, even the colours and the pattern on the trim, all done to make you think your car is out of date before it's 5 minutes old.

There was a time when a company like Lucas could make an ignition coil that would fit 75% of the vehicles in the uk going back 20 years or more, this allowed development and investment in a product with a long design life. Now it would be a "module" that may only fit one model of one manufacurer and may be obsolete after a few years, needs to be produced quickly and cheaply, probably in the far east. This makes for unreliable componants.

The ammount of recalls for defective parts has gone through the roof in recent years, fortunately few are as potentialy dangerous as this one.

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I had the throttle jam wide open on a V8 SD1 Vitesse a few years ago when I was approaching a T junction. I pushed the brake pedal with all of my strength, the front wheels locked up but the back ones were spinning like a staging dragster... The noise and smoke off the tyres was incredible! :blink: Fortunately, the cable / pedal freed itself before I created a new exit at the junction..

Unfortunately, I didn't think about simply turning the engine off or putting the box into neutral.. or even turning the wheel and doing doughnuts until it ran out of fuel :D

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Freelanders have that interesting feature - I spent weeks trying to figure out why the engine wouldn't rev then discovered a broken brake pedal switch was the culprit.

A mate was teaching me to left foot brake the racing freelander and it worked perfectly in his works shogun but I couldn't get the hang of it as I just lost all power I couldn't work it out until we found that if the brakes are applied the revs cut to tick over. The TMC doesn't suffer from that problem wink.gif

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If my car will do 0-60 in say, 10 seconds but I can do 60-0 in more like 3 seconds, surely the brakes will overcome the engine? I might try it tomorrow.

Hmm let me attack the issue with bad science

Engine 150 BHP.

Lets put lose 20% in the drive train.

120 BHP power at the wheels, lets swap to Kw 120 BHP = 88 Kw

Brakes convert motion to heat and energy is conserved so at full engine power each brake has to dissipate 22 KW of heat and that's just to stop the car accelerating.

At 60 mph a 1.5 ton car has 530 KJ of kinetic energy that has to be dissipated on top of the extra power the engine is adding in.

Air resistance is chipping in with about 278 N of drag say. So power of that is ( force x speed ) 278 x 27 = 7.5 KW not that much

So each brake needs to be able to dissipate about 25 KW of heat

If I take this

If my car will do 0-60 in say, 10 seconds but I can do 60-0 in more like 3 seconds

Brakes are roughly 3 times more powerful than the engine so 264 KW.

So you should be able to overpower the engine and stop in 4 secs at full brake power but if you only manage half power on the brakes I think you'd be looking at overheat and brake fade very quickly.

So overall I'd say yes brakes can overpower the engine but you need to be quick.

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