carnut1100
Well-known member
I have a 2010 build Australian version and I have not seen any rise in regen when I touch the brakes....regen seems to be only when I lift off the accellerator.
siai47, I completely agree with you! The Vectrix implementation is wonderfully intuitive. As you pointed out, one's hands are a far more sensitive and sensible control medium than one's foot. I have a joystick on my Gen1 Honda Insight which controls the electric motor - it's great to be able to either apply power or control the amount of regeneration with one's fingertip.siai47 said:Maybe baby steps (like using a joystick or paddles for acceleration and regen) might be a good way to introduce people to a different way to contol a vehicle.
True - I would never do that. I drive 100% of the time in B and it's become second nature for me to modulate the go pedal to slow and stop, using only regen and seldom touching the brake pedal until just before the regen kicks outfjpod said:I'm dense it seems. I don't get it. You take your foot off the go pedal and you get regen automatically. If you have a paddle, and you don't quite get your foot off the go pedal, you are wasting energy. Don't the go pedal and the regen have to be one and the same control? Of course there is the regen brake pedal to adjust your regen a bit more, but you can't (or shouldn't) have your foot on both. You shouldn't be propelling the car and braking it at the same time.
Unless you're the slow, old man in the city driving chain, you're many times forced to slow by what the traffic in front of you is doing - I do usually lag back 2 or 3 car lengths so that regen can slow me enough to not need to touch the brakes, but I use regen a lot especially in city driving and I would like a paddle so I can use it even more effectivelyAnd all this talk of regen...If you are driving locally (city/suburban) and use too much of it, basically you are using the accelerator too much. And if I were going down a long steep hill and wanted to control my speed, all I need to do is lift my foot off the go pedal and adjust my "transmission" paddle to my liking.
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