Stupid question, but I was wondering if any automaker ever tried a "four pedal" car with the setup of gas, brake, clutch, parking-brake?
I know it makes almost no sense, but I imagine somehow an automaker tried it.
Yeah, Mercedes used to have a foot operated parking brake, push with foot, pull lever on dash to lock, release foot.
MatskiMonkYeah, Mercedes used to have a foot operated parking brake, push with foot, pull lever on dash to lock, release foot.
Yeah, Mercedes used to have a foot operated parking brake, push with foot, pull lever on dash to lock, release foot.
Which models, years (don't go Wxxx on me, either). In America, clutches on most Mercedes-Benzes are non-existent in the past 10-20 years, save for a few models.
Wouldn't that be inconvenient on say a hill with a traffic light?
Which models, years (don't go Wxxx on me, either). In America, clutches on most Mercedes-Benzes are non-existent in the past 10-20 years, save for a few models.
Try that on some of the hills in Seattle. You'll roll backwards about 10 feet in a half-second.Why would you use parking brake on a hill with a manual? You just ease off the brake as you ease into the gas (to be simple about it).
Joey DWhy would you use parking brake on a hill with a manual? You just ease off the brake as you ease into the gas (to be simple about it).
Try that on some of the hills in Seattle. You'll roll backwards about 10 feet in a half-second.
Try that on some of the hills in Seattle. You'll roll backwards about 10 feet in a half-second.
So you don't have to stand on the brake at traffic lightsWhy would you use parking brake on a hill with a manual? You just ease off the brake as you ease into the gas (to be simple about it).
And Joey, as others have said, the parking brake is very helpful on steep hills so you don't roll backwards. Usually it's not an issue for me but every now and then I find a hill that is ridiculous, or a car rolls up really close behind me. The parking brake trick is easier with a hand lever but doable with a foot pedal.
From let's say 1990 on, the C class, the E class. Vito, Sprinter. I think I have never seen a Benz with a handoperated parkingbrake?
Why would you use parking brake on a hill with a manual? You just ease off the brake as you ease into the gas (to be simple about it).
I guess not everyone is as skilled as you, clutches should last the life of the car and then some but that also doesn't happen.
If you rode with me you'd probably shake your head with how not smooth I am.
I don't even drive a manual and I have no problems with hill starts when I do, it can't be that hard.
Not to mention old cars that don't have clutch dampers that allow you to drop trou without your passengers even noticing, while stabbing an electronic throttle with molasses-at-best response.a weedy torque curve.
Having to really rev a 1.6 liter wagon while knowingly burning clutch and not being able to do anything about it sucks but thats how I learned and it teaches lessons, plenty of them.nikyWhich means you've never had to pay for the damage clumsy hill starts do to the clutch.
Not every car has 1,000,000 foot pounds of torque and can start to climb just off-idle.
That said, I have no problems with hill starts... but my mechanical sympathy twinges whenever I have to do them in a car with dodgy clutch take-up and a weedy torque curve.
KeefNot to mention old cars that don't have clutch dampers that allow you to drop trou without your passengers even noticing, while stabbing an electronic throttle with molasses-at-best response.
I can feather the clutch and gas simultaneously while pulling away to make for a perfectly smooth transition, but it's simply impossible to not roll backwards without the hand brake.