I saw "Watchdog" this week, and there was a segment about a certain Vauxhall which had rolled into a river because the handbrake had slipped off. Vauxhall reported that this had occurred as a result of the driver pressing the handbrake release button when
applying the handbrake.
Apparently, "most" people do this, and there were indications that NOT pressing the button in to apply the handbrake was frowned upon in advanced drivers' circles. Like so many of these "fads", no reason was given as to why it should be so. "It just is", as they say.
Well I never press the button in when applying the handbrake. What for? The whole purpose of the ratchet it releases is to prevent the lever going back down again after you've finished pulling it up. Pressing the button in defeats this. A young lad who'd just passed his test once took me to task over it, and said he'd been taught to press the button in to apply the handbrake. I asked what this achieved, and the answer given was that it "prevented ratchet wear". Well, I've owned 18 cars and I've been driving 36+ years, and I've never had a handbrake ratchet wear out on me. Admittedly, some cars at the cheap end of the market (like the air cooled Beetle I once had) have very noisy handbrake levers.
I prefer to pull on the handbrake and count the clicks. On my current car (Audi A4 Avant 3.0 TDi 6spd) 3 barely audible clicks will hold the car on a modest slope. I normally park in 1st gear on anything steeper than that. By applying the handbrake this way, I know I'm not pulling it on too hard. I don't know how the button pressers avoid pulling on the brake too hard.
I'm dying to hear from the button pressers why their method is "correct". But I'm not going to change the habits of a lifetime, no matter how good the answers are.
