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georgecalm | 2 years ago

There's a great video from "Technology Connections" covering one-pedal driving here [1]. The gist of it is that one-pedal breaking doesn't have a great way to control the break lights, making it difficult for the cars behind you to recognize that you're slowing down, which can cause accidents.

[1] https://youtu.be/U0YW7x9U5TQ?si=7XFO_ZHIwUjd-3Sm&t=195

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eurleif|2 years ago

This is only a problem in some EVs. Teslas, for example, illuminate the brake lights correctly when regenerative braking is used. The pinned comment on the video also suggests Hyundai may have fixed this on their cars by now, although I don't know whether they followed through.

numpad0|2 years ago

IIRC the industry went from hard regen "may illuminate" -> "shall not illuminate" -> "must illuminate". Some cars designed and/or type approved when the middle one was regulatorily current follows it.

smileysteve|2 years ago

"Correctly".

Manual transmissions (and sport shifting automatics) of most cars from 1904-2024 of sports coupes to trucks don't illuminate the brake lights when engine braking. Drivers following cars should be basing most decisions based on relative speed based on these existing.

If you were to follow behind me in my 2004 manual sports car or a 2021 automatic and only applied brakes when I did, you'd be speeding in my neighborhood and rear ending me, as I keep both in second gear and it keeps me at 20mph.

m463|2 years ago

> Teslas, for example, illuminate the brake lights correctly when regenerative braking is used.

lol. my definition of "correctly" differs from tesla (and probably the engineering groups that recommend this).

I think it should be a setting so that you can make it come on only when you touch the brake pedal.

on twisty roads, this is especially annoying.

You are basically crying wolf, and other drivers will be desensitized to your brake lights, possibly when you really use them.

rootusrootus|2 years ago

Wasn't his whole problem with one particular implementation of one-pedal driving, the Ioniq 5? As I recall, it was poorly implemented and had a relatively common use case that would allow you to stop without the brake lights ever coming on.

This isn't really a problem that other EVs have had. The brake lights come on when you slow down, just as if you had used the brake pedal. It's mostly as easy as triggering at a certain amount of kW generated.

bdcravens|2 years ago

I can't speak for the state of the problem, but the Kia EV6 is a sibling to the Ioniq 5, and I would assume had/has the same issue.

HackeNewsFan234|2 years ago

> Wasn't his whole problem with one particular implementation of one-pedal driving, the Ioniq 5?

Yes. I watched that Tech Connections video a while back. In that implementation, his car would slow down too quickly without brake lights. I think it would get down to something like 15 mph from 55 before they'd come on, yet the deceleration was at least as rapid as casual braking.

I agree with the Tech Connections example; I have no comment on other EVs.

oh_sigh|2 years ago

I can go from 75 to 5 mph in my ICE with the brake lights never coming on. Or, I can maintain 75 mph with my brake lights on 100% of the time.

But really, there should just be a standard - it seems obvious and easy for EVs to get it right: If deceleration is > X m/s^2, then brake lights are on.

WelcomeShorty|2 years ago

The European Union has a regulation that requires EVs to illuminate their brake lights anytime the regenerative-braking system’s deceleration rate exceeds 1.3 meters per second squared, or about 0.13 g.

gnicholas|2 years ago

Unless I downshift using paddles, my ICE will coast forever from 75. My PHEV, on the other hand, will slow down much faster. I want my PHEV to illuminate the brake lights if I'm decelerating above a certain rate, just as you suggest.

It never occurred to me that I might want my ICE to do the same, but I suppose it would be helpful if I'm heading downhill and downshift without touching the brake.

yunohn|2 years ago

If you’d read TFA:

> Brake lights on your electric car will automatically illuminate when you decelerate the vehicle and will remain on when the vehicle fully stops.

InCityDreams|2 years ago

>Brake lights.....will remain on when the vehicle fully stops.

Mmmm, nothing better than a dark, rainy evening in November in a city after a long day at work and you're stuck for minutes on end right behind a car with red lights burning into your retinas. Wankers.

Thanks engineer bastards.