Forum Replies Created
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AuthorPosts
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ucodegen
Participantwhat about the emergency brake? I would think that the e-brake in combination with even a semi-failing pedal brake would be enough to slow down to a non-fatal speed.
That is the last brake you want to touch in that situation. It does not have the braking power that the normal brake has (less than 1/2 the braking power) and it makes the car unstable at speed, making it more likely to spin out or swap ends.
I won’t go into detail about how to do boot-leg turns, but it does involve using the emergency brake. Boot-leg turns are the turns you see on the movies where a car is going full speed forward then suddenly spins around while sliding sideways and then faces the opposite direction and heads off in the opposite direction.
ucodegen
Participantwhat about the emergency brake? I would think that the e-brake in combination with even a semi-failing pedal brake would be enough to slow down to a non-fatal speed.
That is the last brake you want to touch in that situation. It does not have the braking power that the normal brake has (less than 1/2 the braking power) and it makes the car unstable at speed, making it more likely to spin out or swap ends.
I won’t go into detail about how to do boot-leg turns, but it does involve using the emergency brake. Boot-leg turns are the turns you see on the movies where a car is going full speed forward then suddenly spins around while sliding sideways and then faces the opposite direction and heads off in the opposite direction.
ucodegen
ParticipantA comment I saw on the same forum, but further down.. a little OT for the current topic, but I think very accurate and says a lot:
Originally Posted by AaronCompNetSys
Great writeup. I pieced that whole thing together from various places, I don’t understand why the media did not do what you did when it was first released. Controlling of information simply should now happen in the modern age.This is why the media is losing out to everyday people reporting on the Internet.
The media could have informed the public on how to really shut the car off and to watch out for just trying to slow down the car when a run-away situation occurs.. but most of the media just played the emotional angle.
ucodegen
ParticipantA comment I saw on the same forum, but further down.. a little OT for the current topic, but I think very accurate and says a lot:
Originally Posted by AaronCompNetSys
Great writeup. I pieced that whole thing together from various places, I don’t understand why the media did not do what you did when it was first released. Controlling of information simply should now happen in the modern age.This is why the media is losing out to everyday people reporting on the Internet.
The media could have informed the public on how to really shut the car off and to watch out for just trying to slow down the car when a run-away situation occurs.. but most of the media just played the emotional angle.
ucodegen
ParticipantA comment I saw on the same forum, but further down.. a little OT for the current topic, but I think very accurate and says a lot:
Originally Posted by AaronCompNetSys
Great writeup. I pieced that whole thing together from various places, I don’t understand why the media did not do what you did when it was first released. Controlling of information simply should now happen in the modern age.This is why the media is losing out to everyday people reporting on the Internet.
The media could have informed the public on how to really shut the car off and to watch out for just trying to slow down the car when a run-away situation occurs.. but most of the media just played the emotional angle.
ucodegen
ParticipantA comment I saw on the same forum, but further down.. a little OT for the current topic, but I think very accurate and says a lot:
Originally Posted by AaronCompNetSys
Great writeup. I pieced that whole thing together from various places, I don’t understand why the media did not do what you did when it was first released. Controlling of information simply should now happen in the modern age.This is why the media is losing out to everyday people reporting on the Internet.
The media could have informed the public on how to really shut the car off and to watch out for just trying to slow down the car when a run-away situation occurs.. but most of the media just played the emotional angle.
ucodegen
ParticipantA comment I saw on the same forum, but further down.. a little OT for the current topic, but I think very accurate and says a lot:
Originally Posted by AaronCompNetSys
Great writeup. I pieced that whole thing together from various places, I don’t understand why the media did not do what you did when it was first released. Controlling of information simply should now happen in the modern age.This is why the media is losing out to everyday people reporting on the Internet.
The media could have informed the public on how to really shut the car off and to watch out for just trying to slow down the car when a run-away situation occurs.. but most of the media just played the emotional angle.
ucodegen
ParticipantMe thinks most cars these days have power-assisted brakes…Not a brake engineer, but don’t they get they vacuum power from the engine? If an engine is at WOT, vacuum would drop after a few pumps, no?
Correct.. though some vehicles have hydroboost — mostly trucks.
The vehicle will still stop in the same distance without the power assist.. it just takes more pedal pressure. The limit on braking depends upon the tires static and kinetic coefficient of friction with the road and thermal reserve in the brakes. The power assist just makes it easier to push the brake pedal.
However, the thing I did notice is the design of the shift gate pattern is horrible from a usability perspective
..
It’s especially confusing if you were in tiptronics(or whatever lexus calls it) mode (furtherest to the left) and are trying to shift back out.It didn’t look too bad. Looking at the gate, the patterns I would have tried starting from the full left position would have been straight up (checking if the straight up past upshift toggle would lead to neutral – which is not likely), back to center-left, move lever right then up.. pause and then right again. I suspect one of those two last positions is neutral. I haven’t driving this Lexus.. but surmising as an ‘uninitiated’..
A quote from the forum referenced earlier
As the car surged forward I hit the brakes with my left foot hard at 80 mph, right foot still planted on the floorboard. The brakes hauled the car down, was it smooth, no, the car was shaking like the rotors were warped but I expect it was the anti-lock system kicking in. As I slowed enough to have ditched the car, put it against the rail, etc. Appx 20 mph and the brakes were still good….
..
This time I had about 1/3 the braking force as before and the car would not stop. It did slow but not easily and not nearly enough. I let off the brake pedal and ran it back up to 80. I immediately hit the brakes hard again. This time…..I had essentially no brakes. I stood on em. They had faded. My conclusion. On this car you have one chance to stop with the brakes with the engine at WOT.
This is essentially what I mentioned earlier with the braking. If the car is trying to do run-away acceleration.. don’t try to use the brakes to keep the speed down and legal. Stop the car. Very few cars made these days can handle repeat stops under those conditions, and riding the brakes will just heat them up.
About the start/stop button. How do you normally stop the engine when you park it.. hold the button down for 3 seconds?? If that is the case, it is no different than when car is in motion. If it is different, this is the only one I could see that would be a problem for someone unfamiliar with the car.
All this also indicates that most of what the piggs brought up about the vehicle, would have worked.. with the only potential wildcard being the stop-start if it was different between at rest and in motion (ie. immediate shutdown when at rest and 3 sec delay when in motion)
ucodegen
ParticipantMe thinks most cars these days have power-assisted brakes…Not a brake engineer, but don’t they get they vacuum power from the engine? If an engine is at WOT, vacuum would drop after a few pumps, no?
Correct.. though some vehicles have hydroboost — mostly trucks.
The vehicle will still stop in the same distance without the power assist.. it just takes more pedal pressure. The limit on braking depends upon the tires static and kinetic coefficient of friction with the road and thermal reserve in the brakes. The power assist just makes it easier to push the brake pedal.
However, the thing I did notice is the design of the shift gate pattern is horrible from a usability perspective
..
It’s especially confusing if you were in tiptronics(or whatever lexus calls it) mode (furtherest to the left) and are trying to shift back out.It didn’t look too bad. Looking at the gate, the patterns I would have tried starting from the full left position would have been straight up (checking if the straight up past upshift toggle would lead to neutral – which is not likely), back to center-left, move lever right then up.. pause and then right again. I suspect one of those two last positions is neutral. I haven’t driving this Lexus.. but surmising as an ‘uninitiated’..
A quote from the forum referenced earlier
As the car surged forward I hit the brakes with my left foot hard at 80 mph, right foot still planted on the floorboard. The brakes hauled the car down, was it smooth, no, the car was shaking like the rotors were warped but I expect it was the anti-lock system kicking in. As I slowed enough to have ditched the car, put it against the rail, etc. Appx 20 mph and the brakes were still good….
..
This time I had about 1/3 the braking force as before and the car would not stop. It did slow but not easily and not nearly enough. I let off the brake pedal and ran it back up to 80. I immediately hit the brakes hard again. This time…..I had essentially no brakes. I stood on em. They had faded. My conclusion. On this car you have one chance to stop with the brakes with the engine at WOT.
This is essentially what I mentioned earlier with the braking. If the car is trying to do run-away acceleration.. don’t try to use the brakes to keep the speed down and legal. Stop the car. Very few cars made these days can handle repeat stops under those conditions, and riding the brakes will just heat them up.
About the start/stop button. How do you normally stop the engine when you park it.. hold the button down for 3 seconds?? If that is the case, it is no different than when car is in motion. If it is different, this is the only one I could see that would be a problem for someone unfamiliar with the car.
All this also indicates that most of what the piggs brought up about the vehicle, would have worked.. with the only potential wildcard being the stop-start if it was different between at rest and in motion (ie. immediate shutdown when at rest and 3 sec delay when in motion)
ucodegen
ParticipantMe thinks most cars these days have power-assisted brakes…Not a brake engineer, but don’t they get they vacuum power from the engine? If an engine is at WOT, vacuum would drop after a few pumps, no?
Correct.. though some vehicles have hydroboost — mostly trucks.
The vehicle will still stop in the same distance without the power assist.. it just takes more pedal pressure. The limit on braking depends upon the tires static and kinetic coefficient of friction with the road and thermal reserve in the brakes. The power assist just makes it easier to push the brake pedal.
However, the thing I did notice is the design of the shift gate pattern is horrible from a usability perspective
..
It’s especially confusing if you were in tiptronics(or whatever lexus calls it) mode (furtherest to the left) and are trying to shift back out.It didn’t look too bad. Looking at the gate, the patterns I would have tried starting from the full left position would have been straight up (checking if the straight up past upshift toggle would lead to neutral – which is not likely), back to center-left, move lever right then up.. pause and then right again. I suspect one of those two last positions is neutral. I haven’t driving this Lexus.. but surmising as an ‘uninitiated’..
A quote from the forum referenced earlier
As the car surged forward I hit the brakes with my left foot hard at 80 mph, right foot still planted on the floorboard. The brakes hauled the car down, was it smooth, no, the car was shaking like the rotors were warped but I expect it was the anti-lock system kicking in. As I slowed enough to have ditched the car, put it against the rail, etc. Appx 20 mph and the brakes were still good….
..
This time I had about 1/3 the braking force as before and the car would not stop. It did slow but not easily and not nearly enough. I let off the brake pedal and ran it back up to 80. I immediately hit the brakes hard again. This time…..I had essentially no brakes. I stood on em. They had faded. My conclusion. On this car you have one chance to stop with the brakes with the engine at WOT.
This is essentially what I mentioned earlier with the braking. If the car is trying to do run-away acceleration.. don’t try to use the brakes to keep the speed down and legal. Stop the car. Very few cars made these days can handle repeat stops under those conditions, and riding the brakes will just heat them up.
About the start/stop button. How do you normally stop the engine when you park it.. hold the button down for 3 seconds?? If that is the case, it is no different than when car is in motion. If it is different, this is the only one I could see that would be a problem for someone unfamiliar with the car.
All this also indicates that most of what the piggs brought up about the vehicle, would have worked.. with the only potential wildcard being the stop-start if it was different between at rest and in motion (ie. immediate shutdown when at rest and 3 sec delay when in motion)
ucodegen
ParticipantMe thinks most cars these days have power-assisted brakes…Not a brake engineer, but don’t they get they vacuum power from the engine? If an engine is at WOT, vacuum would drop after a few pumps, no?
Correct.. though some vehicles have hydroboost — mostly trucks.
The vehicle will still stop in the same distance without the power assist.. it just takes more pedal pressure. The limit on braking depends upon the tires static and kinetic coefficient of friction with the road and thermal reserve in the brakes. The power assist just makes it easier to push the brake pedal.
However, the thing I did notice is the design of the shift gate pattern is horrible from a usability perspective
..
It’s especially confusing if you were in tiptronics(or whatever lexus calls it) mode (furtherest to the left) and are trying to shift back out.It didn’t look too bad. Looking at the gate, the patterns I would have tried starting from the full left position would have been straight up (checking if the straight up past upshift toggle would lead to neutral – which is not likely), back to center-left, move lever right then up.. pause and then right again. I suspect one of those two last positions is neutral. I haven’t driving this Lexus.. but surmising as an ‘uninitiated’..
A quote from the forum referenced earlier
As the car surged forward I hit the brakes with my left foot hard at 80 mph, right foot still planted on the floorboard. The brakes hauled the car down, was it smooth, no, the car was shaking like the rotors were warped but I expect it was the anti-lock system kicking in. As I slowed enough to have ditched the car, put it against the rail, etc. Appx 20 mph and the brakes were still good….
..
This time I had about 1/3 the braking force as before and the car would not stop. It did slow but not easily and not nearly enough. I let off the brake pedal and ran it back up to 80. I immediately hit the brakes hard again. This time…..I had essentially no brakes. I stood on em. They had faded. My conclusion. On this car you have one chance to stop with the brakes with the engine at WOT.
This is essentially what I mentioned earlier with the braking. If the car is trying to do run-away acceleration.. don’t try to use the brakes to keep the speed down and legal. Stop the car. Very few cars made these days can handle repeat stops under those conditions, and riding the brakes will just heat them up.
About the start/stop button. How do you normally stop the engine when you park it.. hold the button down for 3 seconds?? If that is the case, it is no different than when car is in motion. If it is different, this is the only one I could see that would be a problem for someone unfamiliar with the car.
All this also indicates that most of what the piggs brought up about the vehicle, would have worked.. with the only potential wildcard being the stop-start if it was different between at rest and in motion (ie. immediate shutdown when at rest and 3 sec delay when in motion)
ucodegen
ParticipantMe thinks most cars these days have power-assisted brakes…Not a brake engineer, but don’t they get they vacuum power from the engine? If an engine is at WOT, vacuum would drop after a few pumps, no?
Correct.. though some vehicles have hydroboost — mostly trucks.
The vehicle will still stop in the same distance without the power assist.. it just takes more pedal pressure. The limit on braking depends upon the tires static and kinetic coefficient of friction with the road and thermal reserve in the brakes. The power assist just makes it easier to push the brake pedal.
However, the thing I did notice is the design of the shift gate pattern is horrible from a usability perspective
..
It’s especially confusing if you were in tiptronics(or whatever lexus calls it) mode (furtherest to the left) and are trying to shift back out.It didn’t look too bad. Looking at the gate, the patterns I would have tried starting from the full left position would have been straight up (checking if the straight up past upshift toggle would lead to neutral – which is not likely), back to center-left, move lever right then up.. pause and then right again. I suspect one of those two last positions is neutral. I haven’t driving this Lexus.. but surmising as an ‘uninitiated’..
A quote from the forum referenced earlier
As the car surged forward I hit the brakes with my left foot hard at 80 mph, right foot still planted on the floorboard. The brakes hauled the car down, was it smooth, no, the car was shaking like the rotors were warped but I expect it was the anti-lock system kicking in. As I slowed enough to have ditched the car, put it against the rail, etc. Appx 20 mph and the brakes were still good….
..
This time I had about 1/3 the braking force as before and the car would not stop. It did slow but not easily and not nearly enough. I let off the brake pedal and ran it back up to 80. I immediately hit the brakes hard again. This time…..I had essentially no brakes. I stood on em. They had faded. My conclusion. On this car you have one chance to stop with the brakes with the engine at WOT.
This is essentially what I mentioned earlier with the braking. If the car is trying to do run-away acceleration.. don’t try to use the brakes to keep the speed down and legal. Stop the car. Very few cars made these days can handle repeat stops under those conditions, and riding the brakes will just heat them up.
About the start/stop button. How do you normally stop the engine when you park it.. hold the button down for 3 seconds?? If that is the case, it is no different than when car is in motion. If it is different, this is the only one I could see that would be a problem for someone unfamiliar with the car.
All this also indicates that most of what the piggs brought up about the vehicle, would have worked.. with the only potential wildcard being the stop-start if it was different between at rest and in motion (ie. immediate shutdown when at rest and 3 sec delay when in motion)
ucodegen
ParticipantOut of curiosity is service a nightmare on the Miura?
Yes and no. It is a fairly simple machine (minimal electronics to break in strange ways). If you are willing to go under the hood yourself and are skilled, it is not a problem. I don’t trust most mechanics, particularly for the exotics. The biggest problem is breakage and availability of parts. Lamborghini of that year were all slightly different even if they were sequential serial numbers. The parts were built close to spec and then ‘hand fitted’. Getting around the engine on this one is fairly easy. Its a small V12 mounted transversely and virtually the whole back tilts up to give you access.
ucodegen
ParticipantOut of curiosity is service a nightmare on the Miura?
Yes and no. It is a fairly simple machine (minimal electronics to break in strange ways). If you are willing to go under the hood yourself and are skilled, it is not a problem. I don’t trust most mechanics, particularly for the exotics. The biggest problem is breakage and availability of parts. Lamborghini of that year were all slightly different even if they were sequential serial numbers. The parts were built close to spec and then ‘hand fitted’. Getting around the engine on this one is fairly easy. Its a small V12 mounted transversely and virtually the whole back tilts up to give you access.
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