Mole wrote:
graball wrote:
I think that the scenario that you are imagining (Am I correct in thinking you mean , that if a car is going down a narrow lane and had to pull over to the left , with the nearside wheels on grass or mud and the offside on tarmac, then had to brake sharply, the car would spin?) would never happen, I certainly have never experienced anything like it and I do a lot of driving on narrow lanes whereby you have to pull over and brake if an idiot comes round a blind bend a bit too quickly. For a start the offside wheels would have enough lateral traction to prevent this and i would imagine that the speed you would be needing to achieve a spin in these circumstances would be well in excess of NSL.
That precise situation happens to me sometimes. I can't say "often" but it has definitely happened. Round here, it's usually as I'm going down hill on a single track road. I'm in the "give way" position and there are times when something comes the other way from round a bend and I have to take to the grass with two wheels before I can get to the next passing place. On such occasions, the ABS may well cut in and I leave it to do its thing. As you say, the two wheels on tarmac have good lateral grip, so it can allow the (say) left hand front wheel to lock and unlock on the grass whilst still managing a lot of braking on the two offside wheels. I wouldn' be able to do that if I was cadence braking.
It may well be fair to say that many drivers might never be in that situation (where the wheels of one side of the car was on slipperier stuff), more so for city drivers. Then again, I bet most drivers will never be in a position where the airbag must deploy - but I'm sure most would still prefer to pay for that protection anyway.
My old commute (London/Portsmouth) took me cross-country. Many times I have seen the outer section of the tarmac was wet and muddy, while the rest remained completely dry. I'm guessing these streams were run-offs from fields. This was normal after rain.
There is also the issue of puddles at speed, especially within ruts, where the
tendency to aqua-plane will reduce available grip. Of course one shouldn't be going that quick and really shouldn't be in such a position such that one has to brake hard in that environment, but it does happen.
I do take the point about lateral grip, but I given the advent of 'good' ABS, I would prefer to not bet on that unknown grip.