bbulkow
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Brian
- Joined
- Aug 30, 2022
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- menlo park, california
- Vehicles
- Honda CRV
That page is optimistic at best and misleading at worst. Sorry, department of energy. But the detailed section about 1PD mostly gets it right: it's just a preference. You *might* be doing more coasting with the 1PD interface, or you might not, depending on how you've been trained and your driving style. It's likely, if you're a standard American driver, that 1PD will induce you to "coast" more, but that's very different than saying 1PD doesn't engage the brakes when braking with the accelerator. Maybe the optimistic way to say: that page, as written is what I would call "directionally accurate and factually false", in that it will likely cause the reading audience to do the right thing (turn on 1PD, coast more), even if some of the points are misleading.All things being equal, you will use less brake pad material with 1PD driving.
https://www.energy.gov/energysaver/one-pedal-driving-explained#:~:text=The Benefits of One-Pedal Driving&text=One-pedal driving helps your,lost while coasting and braking.
There's an argument that a skilled operator can "coast" more with 2PD, because (essentially) that coasting range is broader, and you've got more subtlety through the range of the accelerator. I haven't found that true in practice. In my experience, with our vehicles, the sensitivity settings allow you to pick and match your driving style. Turning on power meter and seeing when you're in regen is the way to improve your driving style, and pick a mode that matches the driving and traffic you encounter. I'm talking about whisper / normal / unbridled.
In our cars, the acceleration system is "fly by wire", and any input to increase or decrease speed gets translated into changes in the braking / propulsion system.
If the car can provide the necessary braking through regen, it will. If it can't, it actuates the brakes. This decision is independent of whether you "input" your requirements through 1PD or 2PD.
Let's take an extreme case: you're going down a really long hill (say, I80 westbound after the Donner summit in California), and you gently hit the accelerator because you wish to accellerate. This may not engage the drive system: it may engage the regen system less : which allows gravity to accelerate the car.
Similarly, if you're travelling fast enough, and you pull up on the accelerator *in 1PD or 2PD mode*, you may go past the limits of regen and need to engage the physical brakes.
The car will make this decision based on how much deceleration it needs at a given moment, and even the state of charge / temp / etc. In one of my electric devices (an "electric unicycle" or EUC) which only has regen braking, the device can't brake effectively with full state of charge (no place to put the electrons
Our EVs have deep buffers at the top, and physical brakes, but you get my point. The car figures how how much power the regen system can handle, and past that, applies the brakes - IN BOTH 1PD and 2PD.
Again, all this becomes super transparent if you turn on the on-dash power meter, which is why I get a little wordy whenever this topic comes up. I've turned this on, and it's an eye opener. It's really, really obvious what the car is doing: you hit the limits of regen on the screen. If you're used to driving a Tesla, they have the same basic 1PD / 2PD algos (although with different constants), same as any EV, except Tesla's power meter is on by default, and actually shows you (via a bar that starts out Green when you're in regen and goes grey) when the physical brakes engage. Drive a Tesla for a few days, watch the power meter, play with 1PD / 2PD, it's all very obvious.
By default, we MachE drivers get battery coach, which is a really dumbed down version of the power meter and after the fact. With the power meter, you can see that applying more braking later keeps you in regen: which is what the EPA points out too: coasting as long as you can get away with is optimal, especially at higher speeds.
I even find, at freeway speeds, that in 1PD if I tap the brakes to disengage Blue Cruise, I eng up going beyond the capabilities of regen - something that doesn't happen in 2PD. I've trained myself to put my foot lightly on the accelerator, use the left "engagel/cancel" button to disengage BC, significantly before my offramp. Then I can coast into offramp speed while staying within regen. Again, all very easy to see if you turn on the power meter (grr Ford! Please enable for all!)
If you don't want to go through the hassle of modding your car (it's a 1 bit config change.... Crazy.... I can only imagine Tesla has a patent or something), an OBD2 scanner app should show the same thing: basically you'll see where the (negative) power tops out. There might - must really - be an OBD2 exposed variable to display how much the physical brakes are applied at a given moment, I haven't found it yet. Then you could see visually and trivially when you're going outside of regen, and train your driving habits.
Finally, it stands to reason that AWD models, and ER models, can supply more regen. Had I considered this, I would have probably bought an AWD. AWD is supposed to have worse range, but even now there's scant data on real world differences. The EPA tests almost certainly don't go into how effective and efficient the regen system is, but I suspect it has important impact on real-world range. The AWD build should have greater ability to regen, just like it has greater ability to accelerate. I wonder if, for example, I could normally get out of bluecruise with a brake tap if I had the AWD model.
It also stands to reason that a GT will have even greater ability to regen. It's even possible that in 1PD on a GT its virtually impossible to apply the physical brakes : but my point is the brake decision by the control software is *informed by* but *independent from* the 1PD / 2PD decision.
Thanks for listening. Sorry for the wall of text.
TL;DR - can we please stop saying that 1PD doesn't engage the brakes?
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