Oscar wrote:
"Is the stopping distance shorter with ABS?
No! From early commercials, it may have looked like you could stop on a dime. That instantaneous stop is not realistic. When braking on dry or wet roads your stopping distance will be about the same as with conventional brakes.
You should allow for a longer stopping distance with ABS than for conventional brakes when driving on gravel, slush, and snow. This is because the rotating tire will stay on top of this low traction road surface covering, and effectively "float" on this boundary layer.
A non ABS braked vehicle can lock its tires and create a snow plow effect in front of the tires which helps slow the vehicle. These locked tires can often find more traction below this boundary layer."
It's a fallacy that you stop quicker with ABS. On a dry road, a locked set of wheels will stop you quicker. The friction is actually better than the on/off/on/off effect of ABS. This was described AND proved to us on Scampton airfield in a 44 tonne tanker with a switchable braking system!

Sorry Oscar, you are missing the MOST important aspect of ABS, STEERING. When you lock the wheels and start skidding that is the direction you will continue to travel until you 1. stop, 2. hit something and stop or 3. take your foot off the brake and get the wheels turning again.
ABS has to be the BEST enhancement I have ever seen in a car. What's the point of airbags and crumple zones unless you actually crash? Why not avoid the crash, where possible, by turning the steering wheel away from the danger zone even while attempting to force the brake pedal through the floor?
I am 50 years old and have grown up through drum brakes on a Ford Prefect to current disk/ABS brakes on high performance BMW's and I say thank God for ABS. In my driving I use the ABS as a guide to how well I am braking, if it shudders I am not braking to the optimum ability of the brakes and back off. For the num num who has no idea at least he/she can still try and avoid the crash site by steering away from it. If they are so dumb that they do not know they can still steer and stare resolutely at the place they obviously do not want to be then the crumple zones and airbags need to be deployed.
I 100% agree about snow and gravel roads but there needs to be a trade-off between safety for 99% -v- 1% on snow/gravel. If you spend a great deal of time on these surfaces then get the ABS disconnected but if, like me, you spend the vast majority of your time on bitumen roads then ABS is the MOST important safety equipment that you can have built into a car.