stealthytolkien
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Since day 1, I drove my GTPE with one pedal mode and auto hold mode set to ON.
My wife mainly drives her Lexus RX450h, a fairly heavy six cylinder hybrid SUV with that floaty glide drive that Lexus is known for. She really likes it as she came from a Prius. I find it boring and the CVT drone annoying, but I appreciate that it is a proven, reliable, and comfortable model.
Anyway. When I asked my wife why she prefers the Lexus over Mach-E, she said that she really likes how gasoline cars coast.
I thought about what she said. I recalled that our previous EV was a Tesla and there was way to switch off regenerative braking in Teslas completely. She was also not fond of Teslas (for many other reasons that are irrelevant here).
With that coasting comment in mind, I switched off the one pedal mode (and for shits and giggles, also switched off the auto hold) to match the driving modes to the Lexus.
And that immediately made me realize that Mach E can coast, too!
Believe it or not, I actually really like it that way now that I’ve been driving it like this for 2-3 days.
The stop and go in Mach E has a little “jolting” with the blended braking. Not having the one pedal mode on reduces that jolt significantly. And while driving an EV with one pedal is great, switching it off has made the driving experience a little more natural / traditional, IMHO. Yes, I have to start braking a lot earlier now so that there’s no hard braking at the end that this heavy car doesn’t like but again, it feels kind of nice!!
I am aware that driving without the one pedal mode burdens the brakes a lot more, but my wife appreciated it right away as it was instantly like driving her Lexus, just a lot quicker off the line, of course.
But the beauty of this is that Mach-E can be instantly made to drive like an EV or it can be made to drive like how a traditional gasoline car drives.
Give it a try. Some of you may actually end up liking it or at least appreciate the difference it makes with a couple of toggles. But make absolutely sure to REMEMBER that you’ve changed the modes because you may be caught off guard and the car will lurch forward when you’re not expecting it to with your foot off the brakes.
My wife mainly drives her Lexus RX450h, a fairly heavy six cylinder hybrid SUV with that floaty glide drive that Lexus is known for. She really likes it as she came from a Prius. I find it boring and the CVT drone annoying, but I appreciate that it is a proven, reliable, and comfortable model.
Anyway. When I asked my wife why she prefers the Lexus over Mach-E, she said that she really likes how gasoline cars coast.
I thought about what she said. I recalled that our previous EV was a Tesla and there was way to switch off regenerative braking in Teslas completely. She was also not fond of Teslas (for many other reasons that are irrelevant here).
With that coasting comment in mind, I switched off the one pedal mode (and for shits and giggles, also switched off the auto hold) to match the driving modes to the Lexus.
And that immediately made me realize that Mach E can coast, too!
Believe it or not, I actually really like it that way now that I’ve been driving it like this for 2-3 days.
The stop and go in Mach E has a little “jolting” with the blended braking. Not having the one pedal mode on reduces that jolt significantly. And while driving an EV with one pedal is great, switching it off has made the driving experience a little more natural / traditional, IMHO. Yes, I have to start braking a lot earlier now so that there’s no hard braking at the end that this heavy car doesn’t like but again, it feels kind of nice!!
I am aware that driving without the one pedal mode burdens the brakes a lot more, but my wife appreciated it right away as it was instantly like driving her Lexus, just a lot quicker off the line, of course.
But the beauty of this is that Mach-E can be instantly made to drive like an EV or it can be made to drive like how a traditional gasoline car drives.
Give it a try. Some of you may actually end up liking it or at least appreciate the difference it makes with a couple of toggles. But make absolutely sure to REMEMBER that you’ve changed the modes because you may be caught off guard and the car will lurch forward when you’re not expecting it to with your foot off the brakes.
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