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[return to "Only 7k Miles? EV Owners Not Happy About Tires Not Lasting Long"]
1. mehele+H2[view] [source] 2024-01-27 21:18:55
>>LinuxB+(OP)
So much WTF in this article, like the regenerative braking thing as if the torque for both regular braking and regenerative braking doesn't have to be put through the tyres to slow things down.

I definitely buy people with EVs hooning it around the place wrecking their tyres. It is really easy and fun to make use of all that torque. But it's not actually required.

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2. rented+e8[view] [source] 2024-01-27 21:58:48
>>mehele+H2
I also cannot see why regenerative braking alone is any different, in terms of tire wear, than caliper-on-rotor braking used for the same deceleration. There is something associated with regenerative breaking that I can see being a tire wear issue... one pedal driving.

In an ICE car, oscillating around the proper pedal position needed to maintain a particular speed leads to a cycle of coasting (not so hard on tires) and accelerating (harder on tires). With one pedal driving, at least with excessive oscillation, the cycle consists of regenerative breaking (harder on tires than coasting) and potentially more acceleration because the car slowed more rapidly. The more consistent you are at maintaining pedal position, the less the difference.

This might be best exhibited in downhill driving. An EV nudges the driver to be intentional about their downhill speed by applying regenerative braking, thereby requiring the driver to push the pedal down to reduce the braking. But on steep enough hills, there is still some braking. In an ICE vehicle, the driver might be more prone to just coast and let the car go a bit faster than they would have intentionally chosen.

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