Lol yup! Once that battery is fully charged, it has almost no engine braking.Surprising the brakes got hot with some regen braking going on
When hvb gets full (happens quickly) is when engine braking begins. Engine runs without spark or fuel and compresses air. Were you riding the brake pedal? Did you push the "L" button to select down hill assist?Lol yup! Once that battery is fully charged, it has almost no engine braking.
Doing this always seemed penny wise and pound foolish. Brakes are cheap, engines are expensive.When hvb gets full (happens quickly) is when engine braking begins. Engine runs without spark or fuel and compresses air. Were you riding the brake pedal? Did you push the "L" button to select down hill assist?
I'm thinking that the brakes can get hot and lose their effectiveness and perhaps ignite? I'm no expert, but I know sustained braking may cause brake failure. I'm sure others will weigh in on this and I'd like to hear other viewpoints.Doing this always seemed penny wise and pound foolish. Brakes are cheap, engines are expensive.
Made that trip in our '14 Prius about five years ago. Brakes never seemed to be a problem. I did use braking mode (similar to "L" mode on hybrid Maverick), battery top off from regen is slower on our Prius and the engine braking (after the HVB was full) seemed effective enough that thru careful brake application never experienced hot brakes that I know of. I'm sure I would have burned my hand had I touched them, but did not get any hot brake oder. I would have thought that my Maverick would perform similarly.My wife and I checked Mt Washington off our bucket listMav did fine, the brakes definitely got hot lol.
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Mostly, they would become less effective if they get really hot. I don't know how engine braking works on the hybrid outside of regenerative braking, but on the ecoboost, I'd definitely be using low mode or at least tow/haul to allow the engine to share in the braking task.I'm thinking that the brakes can get hot and lose their effectiveness and perhaps ignite? I'm no expert, but I know sustained braking may cause brake failure. I'm sure others will weigh in on this and I'd like to hear other viewpoints.
Well, on most vehicles under the conditions coming down Mt Washington, if you don't use engine braking, you will overheat the brakes and then you may have some really big expenses. Not from just brake repairs either.Doing this always seemed penny wise and pound foolish. Brakes are cheap, engines are expensive.
Probably application of engine braking along with service brakes has zero impact on the engine reliability or life.Doing this always seemed penny wise and pound foolish. Brakes are cheap, engines are expensive.
I think you meant to quote someone elseProbably application of engine braking along with service brakes has zero impact on the engine reliability or life.
Damn am I starting to have senior moments. Ugh!!!! BTW, fixed my post.I think you meant to quote someone else![]()