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| Scion FR-S / Toyota 86 GT86 General Forum The place to start for the Scion FR-S / Toyota 86 | GT86 |
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#127 | |
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As for OP, go for it. vehicles without ABS have been around for years. If that is the feel and desire you want, its your choice. I wont do it (except perhaps eventually on a track), but I see no reason for all the fuss here about your decision.
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#128 | |
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I've been saying all this time that All this "Safety" bullshit is just the government brainwashing people. |
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| The Following User Says Thank You to Luis_GT For This Useful Post: | SuperTom (02-01-2020) |
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#129 |
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Re: "NHTSA paper entitled "“Preliminary Evaluation of the Effectiveness of Antilock Brake Systems for Passenger Cars" results were, quote, "All types of run-off-road crashes – rollovers, side impacts with fixed objects and frontal impacts with fixed objects – increased significantly with ABS. ""
You DO realize that paper was written in 1996 right? In 1920 I am sure that there were many papers written on how dangerous flying in aircraft was... Re: NHTSA continues to re-affirm "ABS may shorten stopping distances on wet or slippery roads and many systems will shorten stopping distances on dry roads. On very soft surfaces, such as loose gravel or unpacked snow, an ABS system may actually lengthen stopping distances." Exactly what I said. Re: For those in Canada, on their version of the NHTSA's website, in the FAQ on whether ABS stops a vehicle in a shorter distance they emphatically, [b]in bold[/i] state "NO!" Yeah they look like a definitive authority on the technical aspect of automotive engineering. Re: IIHS released an article entitled "We need more study to find out why antilocks are impressive on the test track but not on the road." The article pretty clearly explains that the reason appears to be operator error. Re: General Motors R&D concluded "“it is unlikely that on dry roads ABS can materially reduce risk" 404 - File or directory not found Re: The Society of Automotive Enginers concluded ( Note: Written in 1999) "Kahane [1] found that, with the introduction of ABS, involvements in multi-vehicle crashes involving fatalities on wet roads were significantly reduced by 24 percent, and nonfatal crashes by 14 percent." "For dry roads, ABS was found to be associated with a 17 percent decrease in rollover crashes, a 13 percent decrease in frontal impacts with parked vehicles or fixed objects, and a 7 percent increase in side impacts with parked cars or fixed objects." "For pedestrian crashes, ABS was associated with a 30 percent reduction on dry roads and a 10 percent reduction in unfavorable road conditions (i.e., wet, snowy, icy, gravel)." "In conclusion, the results of this study do not appear to indicate that a problem exists due to driver crash avoidance behavior or driver interaction with ABS which would contribute to the apparent increase in fatal single-vehicle crashes as identified in conjunction with vehicles transitioning from conventional to antilock brake systems." Context, Context, Context. I still say: (and 30 years of driving says) ABS on the street is very valuable and I can see a HUGE difference in stopping ability. On the track - disable it. |
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#130 |
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http://www.monash.edu.au/miri/resear...ectiveness.pdf
(2004) However, results of the analyses of changes in crash type distributions associated with ABS were consistent with other studies. ABS equipped vehicles were found to have a smaller proportion of crashes with other vehicles and a greater proportion of run-off-road crashes than vehicles without ABS. http://www.sciencedirect.com/science...0145750100032X They confirm that ABS does have the potential to reduce the number of accidents, but show that this has not been fully achieved. One reason may be that many drivers have little or no knowledge of ABS. http://ec.europa.eu/transport/road_s...n_cars_abs.htm “A meta-analysis of research studies shows that ABS give a relatively small, but statistically significant reduction in the number of crashes, when all levels of severity and types of crashes are taken together.” http://www-nrd.nhtsa.dot.gov/Pubs/811182.PDF “ABS is quite effective in nonfatal crashes, reducing the overall crash- involvement rate by 6 percent in passenger cars (confidence bounds: 4% to 8%) and by 8 percent in LTVs (confidence bounds: 3% to 11%). The combination of electronic stability control (ESC) and ABS will prevent a large proportion of fatal and nonfatal crashes. “ I can play the "google some stuff and quote things out of context" game as well |
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#131 |
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#132 | |
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Sure this can happen with ABS. Hell, the SUV in the video probably had ABS....but everyone knows you can't control your direction in a skid as well as you can with ABS. Going back to what I said, this video shows how I imagine it feels not having any control over the direction of your car if you were to skid with your ABS fuse pulled out. Do you disagree with that? Or are you arguing with yourself about something I didn't say? |
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#133 | |
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#134 | |
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#135 | |||
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http://www.thetruthaboutcars.com/200...er-risk-by-51/ Quote:
Now, the fact is that a good (80th percentile) driver can stop faster without ABS because they know how to threshold brake. The other fact is that 80% of the drivers have no concept of threshold braking as it isn't taught outside of racing schools - at least in the U.S. and most will stop faster with ABS because they will just lock up the tires and skid which creates much longer stopping distances than with ABS. |
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#136 | |
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#137 |
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Good job pulling your ABS fuse.
I live in the south, we don't get snow. I have plenty of rain experience, I have driven rear wheel drive cars before the era of ABS and TCS. I know how to drive, and I prefer to freely lateralize the car in hazard avoidance rather than have EBD and TCS keep the car neutral, your options for attitude control are much more variable when you can upset the car freely at will AND you know what you are doing. I know how to drive, you probably do too. And I prefer the car to move in a predictable manner so I can respond unconsciously to sudden changes. Its a marginal safety device mandated federally because "bad drivers" also own cars, and it reduces accidents caused by driver error. Sit down in front of some good books and really put some thought into your driving techniques, go to a racing school (skip barber does good classes for the cost a nice tax return) , tear up a few sets of tires, practice in the rain and stop whining about the OP. I'm kind of baffled at what appears to be ..blatantly flaunted inexperience from a forum of people who bought "the best drivers car of the decade" And lets not forget, that 1% being spoke of can be mitigated to 0.01 if you expand your situational awareness. I always drive like I am on the track as far as spatial awareness, course reading. Driving is "Dangerous" so YOU should take driving very very seriously. |
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#138 | |
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#139 |
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#140 |
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