- Mar 10, 2006
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It is a proven fact that braking distance is actually shorter when towing a trailer than when the car is solo (on condition that both the car's brakes and those of the caravan are properly adjusted and maintained). This is due to the fact that when the caravan's overrun brake is deployed, the caravan will tend to tip forward and the increased noseload will push the back end of the car down. This, in turn, increases rear axle load of the car, thereby improving the braking efficiency of that axle. This doesn't mean to say that I think that exceeding the kerbweight would actually be beneficial (there are other effects which are equally counteractive) but I strongly question whether the insurers' assessment of the risk is based on actual accident data. Only 0.9% of all accidents involve cars which are towing so there cannot be very much reliable and differentiated data to form the basis of a justifiable restriction on a 85%+ weight ratio
Lutz.
You are confusing two issues, Allan. I am not saying that car plus caravan would stop as quickly as a lightly laden car with just the driver. What I am saying is that it would stop as quickly as a solo car which is fully laden up to its max. GVW
Lutz
No Colin, you've got it wrong. The caravan doesn't have to brake harder than the car in order for the outfit to be able to stop more quickly. As you rightly say, it couldn't because then its overrun brake would be released.
The reason why stopping distance is shorter is because the car is actually braking harder than when solo. This is because there's more weight on the back axle. More weight, more friction, better braking, it's as simple as that.
Lutz.
Tests have proved that stopping distances for solo cars are increased when ABS is fitted.
Not reduced.
This argument has been debated on the honest john forum some years ago.
However ABS will allow you to steer round a hazard under heavy braking.
Ray
RAY, Your quote:
"Tests have proved that stopping distances for solo cars are increased when ABS is fitted.
Not reduced.
Tests have proved that stopping distances for solo cars are increased when ABS is fitted.
Not reduced.
However ABS will allow you to steer round a hazard under heavy braking."
Please state the source of this incorrect information. Judging by the last statement regarding steering around a hazard, I think someone has confused ABS with ESP.
Lutz
this goes some way towards explaining the point re abs brakes i was trying to get across.
see this link
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/motoring/main.jhtml?xml=/motoring/2002/08/02/emrip03.xml
Take a brake
From my physics course I seem to remember that maximum braking efficiency occurs just before the wheel stops rotating and then begins to skid or slide. I don't think a non-ABS car would stop sooner on a dry surface with the wheels locked and almost certainly an ABS car will stop better on contaminated surfaces unless the driver is very skilful.
J.A.P., Esher
Drivers are not skilful enough, they just believe they are. In the UK alone, more than 90 per cent of all accidents are caused by human error and it's a sad fact that current basic training standards aren't up to the job of ensuring safety on the road. You are correct in your understanding about when braking is at its most efficient - just prior to the wheels locking. Manually braking like this in an emergency, however, is one of the hardest things to learn. It is known as threshold braking, whereby a driver generates the maximum braking force just prior to wheel lock-up. The sensitivity and cool head required for this are expert-only qualities.
Most drivers faced with an emergency will simply stand on the brake pedal, which does two things in a non-ABS car. First it removes all steering control and second, on anything other than a dry, smooth surface, or freshly fallen snow, it increases the braking distance. By repeatedly stamping on the brake pedal (cadence braking), drivers can mimic the effect of ABS and retain steering control, but again this is a technique that requires expert tuition and much practice and it is never as efficient as ABS.
Best by far is a modern ABS system with electronic brake force distribution, which uses wheel sensors and a computer to measure how near to lock-up each wheel is. It then modulates the brake line hydraulic pressure around the point of lock-up, maintaining almost maximum stopping power to each wheel while retaining steering control. In a critical emergency, braking distance is often academic; it is the ability to steer round a hazard that can save the day, yet few drivers understand this or how to use their ABS brakes to enhance safety.
Ray
lutz
I'm sorry if you understood my replies to be blanket statements. They were never meant to be. All I intended to get over was that in a straight line and on a dry road, with all brakes working correctly, a fully laden car fitted with ABS and towing a caravan would be able to stop in a shorter distance than the same fully laden car not towing. Anything that deviates from these conditions could, under adverse circumstances (such as having to swerve at the same time to avoid a hazard for example) have the opposite effect
Lutz
I still await you comments re ABS brakes from my last post.
May I also add that I consider all the above posts, including my own to be blanket statements, unless conditions are attached.
Lutz.
You are confusing two issues, Allan. I am not saying that car plus caravan would stop as quickly as a lightly laden car with just the driver. What I am saying is that it would stop as quickly as a solo car which is fully laden up to its max. GVW
Lutz
No Colin, you've got it wrong. The caravan doesn't have to brake harder than the car in order for the outfit to be able to stop more quickly. As you rightly say, it couldn't because then its overrun brake would be released.
The reason why stopping distance is shorter is because the car is actually braking harder than when solo. This is because there's more weight on the back axle. More weight, more friction, better braking, it's as simple as that.
Lutz.
Tests have proved that stopping distances for solo cars are increased when ABS is fitted.
Not reduced.
This argument has been debated on the honest john forum some years ago.
However ABS will allow you to steer round a hazard under heavy braking.
Ray
RAY, Your quote:
"Tests have proved that stopping distances for solo cars are increased when ABS is fitted.
Not reduced.
Tests have proved that stopping distances for solo cars are increased when ABS is fitted.
Not reduced.
However ABS will allow you to steer round a hazard under heavy braking."
Please state the source of this incorrect information. Judging by the last statement regarding steering around a hazard, I think someone has confused ABS with ESP.
Lutz
this goes some way towards explaining the point re abs brakes i was trying to get across.
see this link
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/motoring/main.jhtml?xml=/motoring/2002/08/02/emrip03.xml
Take a brake
From my physics course I seem to remember that maximum braking efficiency occurs just before the wheel stops rotating and then begins to skid or slide. I don't think a non-ABS car would stop sooner on a dry surface with the wheels locked and almost certainly an ABS car will stop better on contaminated surfaces unless the driver is very skilful.
J.A.P., Esher
Drivers are not skilful enough, they just believe they are. In the UK alone, more than 90 per cent of all accidents are caused by human error and it's a sad fact that current basic training standards aren't up to the job of ensuring safety on the road. You are correct in your understanding about when braking is at its most efficient - just prior to the wheels locking. Manually braking like this in an emergency, however, is one of the hardest things to learn. It is known as threshold braking, whereby a driver generates the maximum braking force just prior to wheel lock-up. The sensitivity and cool head required for this are expert-only qualities.
Most drivers faced with an emergency will simply stand on the brake pedal, which does two things in a non-ABS car. First it removes all steering control and second, on anything other than a dry, smooth surface, or freshly fallen snow, it increases the braking distance. By repeatedly stamping on the brake pedal (cadence braking), drivers can mimic the effect of ABS and retain steering control, but again this is a technique that requires expert tuition and much practice and it is never as efficient as ABS.
Best by far is a modern ABS system with electronic brake force distribution, which uses wheel sensors and a computer to measure how near to lock-up each wheel is. It then modulates the brake line hydraulic pressure around the point of lock-up, maintaining almost maximum stopping power to each wheel while retaining steering control. In a critical emergency, braking distance is often academic; it is the ability to steer round a hazard that can save the day, yet few drivers understand this or how to use their ABS brakes to enhance safety.
Ray
lutz
I'm sorry if you understood my replies to be blanket statements. They were never meant to be. All I intended to get over was that in a straight line and on a dry road, with all brakes working correctly, a fully laden car fitted with ABS and towing a caravan would be able to stop in a shorter distance than the same fully laden car not towing. Anything that deviates from these conditions could, under adverse circumstances (such as having to swerve at the same time to avoid a hazard for example) have the opposite effect
Lutz
I still await you comments re ABS brakes from my last post.
May I also add that I consider all the above posts, including my own to be blanket statements, unless conditions are attached.