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Brake Anomaly Speed Range?

Discussion in 'Gen 3 Prius Main Forum' started by bwilson4web, Jan 19, 2010.

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Speeds when braking anomaly occurs?

Poll closed Jan 26, 2010.
  1. Under 5 mph

    16.7%
  2. Under 10 mph

    7.1%
  3. Under 15 mph

    9.5%
  4. Under 20 mph

    11.9%
  5. Under 25 mph

    11.9%
  6. Any speed

    4.8%
  7. No significant experience

    38.1%
  1. bwilson4web

    bwilson4web BMW i3 and Model 3

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    Last night I hit the speed humps at everything from 25 mph to 45 mph. Only at 45 mph when the car was descending did I feel and weakness but once the tires were on the flat street, everything was normal. There was no impression of extended braking delay except when the tires were lightly loaded.

    I think the hypothesis of vehicle specific may make more sense BUT I will continue to try and replicate it.

    Instrumentation to document this problem will be a challenge ... the kind I like.

    Bob Wilson
     
  2. fuzzy1

    fuzzy1 Senior Member

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    I would like to encourage readers to keep reporting locations and circumstances regardless of any favorite hypothesis du jour. Often the root cause is not something that we were looking at, and is not likely to be discovered without a broad range of data or reports.

    Truly an engineer.
     
  3. wfolta

    wfolta Active Member

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    Bob, so you don't think that my suggested experiment is the way to go? Seems to me that this "big bump", "small bump" kind of willy-nilly testing will never work: too much variability, and who wants to hit a lot of bumps at speed to test something out?

    If we had people on non-bumpy roads shifting into N while braking -- in a safe manner -- we would have a test that does not depend on finding the right bumps at the right speed. A reproducible test that a lot more people would be willing to try, and with very little variability.

    And, if it works, it eliminates ABS as a direct factor. WE'd know that the only role ABS plays is that it is canceling regen braking, so the issue is with how much brake pressure the system thinks it needs, and how much it gets, when the switchover occurs.

    If no one's interested in a reproducible experiment -- and no one's taken me up on it yet -- I guess I'll just move along.
     
  4. DetPrius

    DetPrius Active Member

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    wfolta, I'd like to try this but I haven't had an opportunity to (alone in the car). I wonder though if shifting to neutral while in regen actually puts the system through EXACTLY the same process as hitting a bump and the tire losing contact with the road surface while in regen. I'm not saying it's not worth trying though.
     
  5. radiocycle

    radiocycle Active Member

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    Sorry, I haven't read all the posts, but are you interested in the braking problem where the brakes grab when first starting out, or only the "pot hole" type problem in this pole??
     
  6. bwilson4web

    bwilson4web BMW i3 and Model 3

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    Ok,

    I'm interested in the intermittent, 'fading' problem since that seems to cause the most consternation yet remains intermittent. Certainly I'll read anything posted in the threads but the symptoms we're looking for incorporate:

    1. feeling of 'acceleration' during a braking event - in particular where the operator reports a longer than expected stopping distance. These should be reported as transients longer than a flying or floating wheel event since I can replicate this ('flying') with high speed ramps or humps.
    Fortunately, I've found and ordered instrumentation to gather engineering data:
    [​IMG]
    This unit has a high resolution, 320 Hz, sampling interval and built-in, rechargeable battery.

    [​IMG]
    This unit has a sampling rate of 160 Hz and uses a removable battery. This is the unit I'll "loan" to those who can replicate the problem.

    One interesting aspect is we can use these units to finally document the claims of "pulse and glide" (PnG) advocates. I use the cruise control to give a reproducible "pulse" and "N" to handle the glide. Yet the advocates of PnG seem to always advocate manual, undocumented acceleration and glide profiles. This instrument will finally give us engineering units.

    But first, let's document the braking anomaly. Having hard, empirical data, we can absolutely know what is going on and in a month or so, nail down what is going on. Combined with a GPS recorded track, we'll be in high cotton.

    Bob Wilson
     
  7. DetPrius

    DetPrius Active Member

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    Bob, PLEASE sign me up to borrow this device! I figured something like this existed but hadn't gone looking for it! Let me know what you need for a "deposit" to insure its safe return.
     
  8. wfolta

    wfolta Active Member

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    True. We may find that this does not trigger the problem, or does not do so in a way that mimics the original problem.

    BUT, if it does reproduce the problem for those who experience it, and does not reproduce the problem for those who do not, we've just eliminated potholes and road surfaces and ABS from the equation and simplified things dramatically.

    Plus we'd have a way for you to test your own car, without worrying that you weren't hitting the proper-sized pothole at the proper speed, with proper moisture in the air, and ... a whole set of circumstances.

    Sounds like people are having more fun with GPS and accelerometers, etc, to bother.
     
  9. wick1ert

    wick1ert Senior Member

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    I'm guessing my experiences fall into this realm of things. I noticed the temporary "less braking / non braking" while decelerating down a hill near my house and driving over a man-hole cover. I actually managed to replicate it a few times, inadvertently of course! I would say I was around 10 MPH for this, given that it's right like 20 feet from the stop light. I tend to slow & stop gently, so as to maximize the regen when I know I have no other option but to stop. I don't recall experiencing this any other way, though I try my best to avoid large bumps, pot holes, etc. The car is rough enough of smaller bumps that I don't want to feel it on the large ones! Of course, my Harley Sportster is rougher on bumps than the Prius is, lol.
     
  10. DetPrius

    DetPrius Active Member

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    I finally tried the test last night and was going between 45 & 50 MPH down a hill, and with the brakes on and CHG roughly in the middle of the gauge, I shifted to Neutral. The transition was very smooth but also had a clear decrease in braking effectiveness while holding the same pedal pressure. I tried a second time and received the same result. I am one who can fairly easily replicate the problem over a bump or depression. My experience with the Neutral test is while the braking was decreased, I don't believe it decreased as much as when it occurs from a bump or depression. The fact that while shifting to Neutral is something I did so I was completely aware of what was going on may explain why it felt like less of a decrease than when hitting a bump or depression. This will be another test to be performed with the accelerometer.
     
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  11. bwilson4web

    bwilson4web BMW i3 and Model 3

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    Please post a Google Map address or Google street view of the location. We are collecting them to document the street conditions associated with the event. Within the limits of what we have in the Huntsville area, I try to replicate the condition ... so far with small results:

    • one pothole near the dog park (very brief)
    • 'flying' at 45 mph over speed humps and bumps (quite illegal speed)
    The more locations we can document and specific vehicles, the better the handle we'll get on what is going on. I have instrumentation coming that should allow us to quantify the effect. This is not a diagnosis but gathering engineering data.

    It would be great if someone who can replicate the problem might get a 'loaner' Prius or 'rental' and see if they can replicate the problem with a different car. Perhaps work with the dealer for a demo ride to the spot. Sad to say, everyone who has reported the problem is more than a 'day trip' away from Huntsville AL.

    Bob Wilson
     
  12. jayman

    jayman Senior Member

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    Bob

    The FJ also has odd brake behavior, but usually if you are at a red light or otherwise on the brake for a long time. The FJ uses electric assist brakes just like the Prius does

    What happens, say you have your right foot on the brake pedal for +5 minutes. Light turns green, foot off brake and gently press the gas. Vehicles ahead suddenly come to a stop, eg a car in the intersection conks out due to the arctic temps

    Put your right foot on the brake pedal, and the pedal will either be rock hard or sink to the floor. You can either yank up the handbrake, which locks the rear brakes and oddly reactivates the front brakes; or, you quickly have to release and reapply the brakes

    Has happened to me a couple of times now with my FJ. There is no way I have found to replicate the condition to make such a fault occur. No codes stored, no evidence it happened, but enough FJ owners have complained of it that I'm wondering if there is a common flaw in how Toyota either writes the brake algorithm or how they design the mechanical brake eg electric brake assist
     
  13. pakitt

    pakitt Senior Member

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    I had the "brake anomaly" happen to me a couple of times without snow and 3 times on snow.
    The 2 times in the "dry" happened once where there was gravel on the road and the wheels slipped and I had to apply more brake force. The second time was while slightly braking where the road had a clear-cut transition from regular tarmac to dirt road. In that case, even with slight braking I felt the difference for a split second.

    In case of snow, the feeling is the same I got with the VW Polo with ABS I used to drive before getting the Prius. You break a bit and all of a sudden the wheels lock because of frozen snow (even with winter tires it happens) and the ABS needs to start - but because you are not braking a lot (this would have ABS work better BTW), you have for a split second the sensation the car is not braking. You brake more and ABS kicks in. With the Polo I ended "long" with no consequences fortunately, several times - especially when breaking and turning slightly left/right to enter a major road at an intersection - that is, when the wheels get to loose grip the most. (If you have to break, you break hard going straight! not while turning...)

    In the Prius the sensation is similar, with the difference that when (and if) ABS kicks in, you don't feel it. Plus I tend to press the brake pedal less than in the Polo since the regen brake seems to be more effective than the Polo's normal brakes with the same brake force applied on the pedal.

    Nevertheless, all this happens at less than 20km/h. And it is a bit annoying - you have to think that likely you are going to have this abrupt transition with brake effect loss between regen and normal brakes and need to push more the brake or be prepared of the "event"... ("will it happen or not" "is the bicycle rider going to be ironed on the road by me or not?")

    At higher speeds, if it happens - whatever the delay, if you have to break a lot to avoid rear-ending somebody, you do brake "a lot" in any case and hence this weird feeling is not there as you are probably already breaking with the regular brakes and ABS runs already.

    PS: whatever the cause, I think Toyota should do a software tune to make sure the hydraulic brakes kick in "before" regen is turned off (say, by pre-pumping the brake fluid or whatever other trick). As it is, when it happens, the lag is a bit too much for my taste. I would rather have the car brake more than less. Worse case they rear-end me, and *they* have to repay me! ;)
     
  14. bwilson4web

    bwilson4web BMW i3 and Model 3

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    Interesting ... a gap between the ABS threshold and light braking.

    Bob Wilson
     
  15. rocketrob

    rocketrob Member

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    Looks like I'm late to the party. I just found this thread but I have experienced the same "brake weakness" you folks are talking about plenty of times. Living around the hilly parts of LA, on downhill grades I tend to brake just enough to maintain constant speed. The weakness occurs typically when there is sudden loss of traction, usually on pot-holes (not "bumps") and more noticeably in slick road conditions.

    It's hard to say at what speed this happens, maybe between 15-35 mph. Just whenever the car loses it's stance, or normal force. It hardly persists long enough for the flashing yellow Traction light to warn me of danger. (Thanks, Prius, for the warning but I can tell you're confused.)

    I can understand how some perceive the event as feeling like an acceleration, but free-wheeling is a better description (as someone put it earlier). In my case, think of it as loss of brake force causes momentary acceleration due to gravity.

    This may just be a characteristic of the Prius braking, traction, and stability system. More nuance than nuisance. I'm willing to adjust my driving behavior to compensate.


    Bob: Those data loggers are awesome, thanks for pointing them out. I may get one just for fun!