
NO insurance company will ever cover you if you remove ABS or tamper with any safety feature.
Stupid idea

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angusis2fast4u wrote:By threshold braking you actually stop quicker than with ABS, ABS is better for people who have a tendency to slam on the brakes...
MattR wrote:Angus, I have had just enough to drink to respond to your post.......
First, when do you do these mountain runs, as you will pass my place and I want to make sure I'm not on the road when you are, could you give me notice when you are heading out. If you are driving on a public road hard enough that the ABS is kicking in, or because your suspension is so bad that it feels like it is kicking in, then you are doing it wrong, end of story..... Do some track days if you want to drive fast, don't drive around my place and where I drive as a feckstick!!! I quite enjoy a slow run up the hill at the speed limit on a nice cool morning, I don't need some idiot coming up behind me at warp factor or coming the other way crossing the lines because they are going too quick for the road.
Second, you will make your car unroadworthy and up for big fines if you do this to a registered car, as well as have your insurance company, if you are insured, will wipe you completely. I do not want to be the bunny who is chasing you for dollars when you run into me on one of your "mountain runs". I suppose I could always send around some motorcycle enthusiast friends to get the dollars to fix my car after you run into it.....![]()
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Third, one driving course where you nailed 4 threshold braking stops does not make you a gun driver. I do many threshold braking stops in a controlled environment most days I am working in my part time job, do I brake that way on the road???? No fecking way, threshold braking is an emergency procedure, better to use my vision to not need to use the emergency braking in the first place.
Four, the ABS is one of the best safety features that has been used in the automotive industry since seatbelts, why the feck would you want to disconnect it????? If you use the brakes properly and can modulate the pressure through the brake pedal to provide the correct force for close to threshold braking you won't have the ABS kick in.
Fifth, uneven road surfaces will cause the wheel behavior you described with one wheel not locking and the wheel on the other side having the ABS kick in on the rough surface. disconnecting the ABS will cause the wheel to lock and you won't have the skill to modulate the brake pedal so the wheel doesn't lock and still provide maximum braking. Again you should be using your vision to be aware of this and braking appropriately that you are not using brake pressures close to near threshold braking.
So in summary......
Don't disconnect the ABS, it is illegal, you aren't the gun driver you think you are, and I don't want you driving anywhere near me or my loved ones if you are using threshold braking on the road.......
angusis2fast4u wrote:davekmoore wrote:Just my 2 cents' worth, but if you're activating ABS on the road, you need ABS on the road as you would otherwise be locking up wheels, which lengthens your stopping distance and your ability to steer. You'd also need to consult your insurers.
By threshold braking you actually stop quicker than with ABS, ABS is better for people who have a tendency to slam on the brakes...
You will need to re-read the section where I said I could feel the pedal pulsing but wheels not locking
MattR wrote:Angus, I have had just enough to drink to respond to your post.......
First, when do you do these mountain runs, as you will pass my place and I want to make sure I'm not on the road when you are, could you give me notice when you are heading out. If you are driving on a public road hard enough that the ABS is kicking in, or because your suspension is so bad that it feels like it is kicking in, then you are doing it wrong, end of story..... Do some track days if you want to drive fast, don't drive around my place and where I drive as a feckstick!!! I quite enjoy a slow run up the hill at the speed limit on a nice cool morning, I don't need some idiot coming up behind me at warp factor or coming the other way crossing the lines because they are going too quick for the road.
Second, you will make your car unroadworthy and up for big fines if you do this to a registered car, as well as have your insurance company, if you are insured, will wipe you completely. I do not want to be the bunny who is chasing you for dollars when you run into me on one of your "mountain runs". I suppose I could always send around some motorcycle enthusiast friends to get the dollars to fix my car after you run into it.....![]()
![]()
Third, one driving course where you nailed 4 threshold braking stops does not make you a gun driver. I do many threshold braking stops in a controlled environment most days I am working in my part time job, do I brake that way on the road???? No fecking way, threshold braking is an emergency procedure, better to use my vision to not need to use the emergency braking in the first place.
Four, the ABS is one of the best safety features that has been used in the automotive industry since seatbelts, why the feck would you want to disconnect it????? If you use the brakes properly and can modulate the pressure through the brake pedal to provide the correct force for close to threshold braking you won't have the ABS kick in.
Fifth, uneven road surfaces will cause the wheel behavior you described with one wheel not locking and the wheel on the other side having the ABS kick in on the rough surface. disconnecting the ABS will cause the wheel to lock and you won't have the skill to modulate the brake pedal so the wheel doesn't lock and still provide maximum braking. Again you should be using your vision to be aware of this and braking appropriately that you are not using brake pressures close to near threshold braking.
So in summary......
Don't disconnect the ABS, it is illegal, you aren't the gun driver you think you are, and I don't want you driving anywhere near me or my loved ones if you are using threshold braking on the road.......
Caffeine wrote:angusis2fast4u wrote:By threshold braking you actually stop quicker than with ABS, ABS is better for people who have a tendency to slam on the brakes...
Errr... no, on a perfectly flat surface, with all 4 wheels having identical grip, you might be able to match and if you're very lucky slightly beat ABS by threshold braking.
What ABS can do that you cant is effectively threshold brake each wheel independently.
You feel the pedal pulse, and not a lock up? well that's the ABS doing its job.
lizard wrote:MattR wrote:Angus, I have had just enough to drink to respond to your post.......
First, when do you do these mountain runs, as you will pass my place and I want to make sure I'm not on the road when you are, could you give me notice when you are heading out. If you are driving on a public road hard enough that the ABS is kicking in, or because your suspension is so bad that it feels like it is kicking in, then you are doing it wrong, end of story..... Do some track days if you want to drive fast, don't drive around my place and where I drive as a feckstick!!! I quite enjoy a slow run up the hill at the speed limit on a nice cool morning, I don't need some idiot coming up behind me at warp factor or coming the other way crossing the lines because they are going too quick for the road.
Second, you will make your car unroadworthy and up for big fines if you do this to a registered car, as well as have your insurance company, if you are insured, will wipe you completely. I do not want to be the bunny who is chasing you for dollars when you run into me on one of your "mountain runs". I suppose I could always send around some motorcycle enthusiast friends to get the dollars to fix my car after you run into it.....![]()
![]()
Third, one driving course where you nailed 4 threshold braking stops does not make you a gun driver. I do many threshold braking stops in a controlled environment most days I am working in my part time job, do I brake that way on the road???? No fecking way, threshold braking is an emergency procedure, better to use my vision to not need to use the emergency braking in the first place.
Four, the ABS is one of the best safety features that has been used in the automotive industry since seatbelts, why the feck would you want to disconnect it????? If you use the brakes properly and can modulate the pressure through the brake pedal to provide the correct force for close to threshold braking you won't have the ABS kick in.
Fifth, uneven road surfaces will cause the wheel behavior you described with one wheel not locking and the wheel on the other side having the ABS kick in on the rough surface. disconnecting the ABS will cause the wheel to lock and you won't have the skill to modulate the brake pedal so the wheel doesn't lock and still provide maximum braking. Again you should be using your vision to be aware of this and braking appropriately that you are not using brake pressures close to near threshold braking.
So in summary......
Don't disconnect the ABS, it is illegal, you aren't the gun driver you think you are, and I don't want you driving anywhere near me or my loved ones if you are using threshold braking on the road.......
Matt he is 18 years old " P " plater so he knows everything and wont take advice so this post is useless
tbro wrote:This isn't meant to BAG out on you but hopefully get you thinking, cause I know that a certain HWP boss is getting rather sick of cleaning up MX5 drivers after
they come undone up on Glorious.
Terry
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