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Electronics Repair (sci.electronics.repair) Discussion of repairing electronic equipment. Topics include requests for assistance, where to obtain servicing information and parts, techniques for diagnosis and repair, and annecdotes about success, failures and problems. |
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On Mon, 24 Aug 2015 10:48:51 -0700, John Robertson
wrote: On 08/23/2015 6:10 PM, Ashton Crusher wrote: On Sun, 23 Aug 2015 09:13:20 -0400, "(PeteCresswell)" wrote: Per Stormin Mormon: Does braking with the left foot increase the risk of accidents? From what little I have read, there is disagreement on the answer. The traditional answer is that left-foot braking is, somehow, less safe. I can't remember the term-of-art for it, but there is a recognized cause of accidents that consists of the driver stepping on the accelerator when they were trying to step on the brake. A driver that ALWAYS uses the right foot to Brake and Accelerate is the one most likely to use that right foot on the wrong pedal. Someone who is skilled at left foot braking is far less likely to try to push the accelerator with the right foot with the intention of braking. I'm sure there are always exceptions. And the left foot break idiot(s) who rests his/her foot on the brake pedal and thus drives around all day with their brake lights on? Not to mention wearing out the brake pads or (even worse) overheating the brakes so they fail at an inopportune time... I've seen it maybe twice in 40 years. It's an imaginary problem. And for all you know they were using their right foot and had it on both the gas and brake at the same time... unless you have X-ray vision of course and could actually see their feet. Or perhaps their brake light switch was broken making the brake lights come on and off without any one pushing on the pedal. Someone who rode their brakes like that "all day" would be emitting smoke. I see that a lot, so I vote no to left foot braking. Unless you can't use your right foot, but we are talking about folks without any sort of handicap (cast, missing foot, etc.). No one has suggested that people should left foot brake if they don't have the skills necessary. Some people just aren't trainable or don't have the ability, or are too easily confused for anything above bare minimum. John :-#)# A few months ago there was an article in the New Yorker about vehicle defect investigation and vehicle recalls from an engineering perspective in which it was mentioned that some people think that left-foot braking may actually be safer because it reduces the chances of a "wrong pedal" error to nearly zero. |
#2
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Ashton Crusher wrote:
I've seen it maybe twice in 40 years. It's an imaginary problem. And for all you know they were using their right foot and had it on both the gas and brake at the same time... unless you have X-ray vision of course and could actually see their feet. Or perhaps their brake light switch was broken making the brake lights come on and off without any one pushing on the pedal. Someone who rode their brakes like that "all day" would be emitting smoke. What if you are mutant with three feet? Then you could operate the brake, clutch, and accelerator independently. It would make waltzing easier too. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#3
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#4
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Posted to sci.electronics.repair,rec.autos.tech,alt.home.repair
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On 08/25/2015 07:30 AM, Scott Dorsey wrote:
What if you are mutant with three feet? Then you could operate the brake, clutch, and accelerator independently. It would make waltzing easier too. To say nothing of driving a Model T. |
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