▲ | stavros 2 days ago | |||||||||||||
Hmm, I don't really understand what you mean. If I want to reduce speed far ahead, I just ease up on the throttle pedal a little, and the car slows down a little. If I ease up a lot, it slows down a lot. I'm not sure what you mean... | ||||||||||||||
▲ | apelapan 2 days ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||||||||
I want to glide at roughly constant speed for some distance. Some mild breaking is fine. I cant glide if I let off the accelerator, then I come to a fairly firm stop. I want my right foot on the break pedal, ready to brake hard and fast in the rare case that something comes across the road. I don't want to reduce speed any further than is necessary to have a safe breaking distance at fully ready state. With any other car (that I have driven) than the Tesla, I can approach a situation like this at between 20kmh and 40kmh, depending on the specifics. In the Tesla I need to go at between 5 and 10kmh. | ||||||||||||||
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▲ | eldaisfish 2 days ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||||||||
regenerative braking can be uncomfortable for passengers as the car is constantly alternating between accelerating (or constant speed) and braking. It isn't even light braking, it is significant braking. I generally turn off the auto regen braking because i find it uncomfortable. Importantly, regenerative braking is a danger on icy roads. I disable it entirely in the winter in eastern Canada because it often causes the tires to lose grip. | ||||||||||||||
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