OMO7
Well-known member
Not to be a dick but I started crying at the thought of someone throwing their passengers around in 1PD lmao
1PD obviously takes more skill, but just like driving a manual once you get it down it gives you better control of the vehicle, and imo it's more fun to drive.
I have approx 10K miles, and the only time I've had a regenerative breaking under 50% is when some jackass pulled into my lane from a dead stop. Otherwise it's not uncommon if I go a day or two without using the brakes.
If you can feather the brake properly I find you can split the difference between throttle and regen so you're still able to "coast". At this point the only reason I'd need to change brake pads is because of the elements which is a big reason I bought the truck.
1PD obviously takes more skill, but just like driving a manual once you get it down it gives you better control of the vehicle, and imo it's more fun to drive.
I have approx 10K miles, and the only time I've had a regenerative breaking under 50% is when some jackass pulled into my lane from a dead stop. Otherwise it's not uncommon if I go a day or two without using the brakes.
If you can feather the brake properly I find you can split the difference between throttle and regen so you're still able to "coast". At this point the only reason I'd need to change brake pads is because of the elements which is a big reason I bought the truck.
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(I drove a Mach-E for two years almost exclusively using 1PD)
Seems like it needed brake service about every 10K miles the way she drove it! (And she drove it almost 250,000 miles over 15 years) So yeah, a lot of money spent on brakes on that one over the years. I suppose I've been under-appreciating the importance of a vehicle with low brake pad maintenance