Sponsored

Parking brake - can it be set automatically?

dww

Well-known member
First Name
David
Joined
Dec 10, 2023
Threads
13
Messages
160
Reaction score
170
Location
San Antonio, TX
Vehicles
F150L, Tesla 3P, YP
Is there a setting to have the parking brake automatically engage when the truck is put in park? My other EV automatically sets the parking brake whenever the car is put in park and disengages it when D or R is selected. The truck is able to disengage the parking brake when the accelerator is pressed, why would you not want to automatically engage it when park is selected if you have removed the possibility of driving with the parking brake engaged?
Sponsored

 

TaxmanHog

Moderator
Moderator
First Name
Noel
Joined
Jan 19, 2022
Threads
169
Messages
12,025
Reaction score
12,605
Location
SE. Mass.
Vehicles
2022 Lightning Lariat-ER Max Tow & 2024 Harley-Davidson Road Glide CVO-ST
Occupation
Retired
No, but if the truck detects a steep enough incline it will automatically set it.
 
OP
OP

dww

Well-known member
First Name
David
Joined
Dec 10, 2023
Threads
13
Messages
160
Reaction score
170
Location
San Antonio, TX
Vehicles
F150L, Tesla 3P, YP
No, but if the truck detects a steep enough incline it will automatically set it.
Is there a reason to not automatically set it every time if it can set it automatically based on incline? I know I’m being lazy by not reaching down to set it so the truck doesn’t rock in park when the normal brake is released but it seems like automatically setting it and having a manual release if you really wanted it off (brake rotor replacement) would be a more useful default logic.
 

TaxmanHog

Moderator
Moderator
First Name
Noel
Joined
Jan 19, 2022
Threads
169
Messages
12,025
Reaction score
12,605
Location
SE. Mass.
Vehicles
2022 Lightning Lariat-ER Max Tow & 2024 Harley-Davidson Road Glide CVO-ST
Occupation
Retired
I don't think Ford felt it was a user priority.

They did make it such that auto disengagement for drive & reverse is a thing, but felt {IMHO} that everytime is overkill
 

GDN

Well-known member
First Name
Greg
Joined
Feb 15, 2022
Threads
84
Messages
3,177
Reaction score
3,844
Location
Dallas, TX
Vehicles
Lightning Lariat ER, Performance Y
Occupation
IT
Automatic parking brake was noted for 2024 and noted it will come to prior trucks via SW update.
 

Sponsored

TaxmanHog

Moderator
Moderator
First Name
Noel
Joined
Jan 19, 2022
Threads
169
Messages
12,025
Reaction score
12,605
Location
SE. Mass.
Vehicles
2022 Lightning Lariat-ER Max Tow & 2024 Harley-Davidson Road Glide CVO-ST
Occupation
Retired
Automatic parking break was noted for 2024 and noted it will come to prior trucks via SW update.
I had faith in the parking pawl, but nice to accommodate the masses, I must be in the minority of opinionated folk.
 

GDN

Well-known member
First Name
Greg
Joined
Feb 15, 2022
Threads
84
Messages
3,177
Reaction score
3,844
Location
Dallas, TX
Vehicles
Lightning Lariat ER, Performance Y
Occupation
IT
I can't find the article where I read that, but thinking it was in some of the Flash information where a lot about the '24's was revealed.

We also get most of what hits the MachE and @RickLightning reported here that the the MachE received it already.
 

TaxmanHog

Moderator
Moderator
First Name
Noel
Joined
Jan 19, 2022
Threads
169
Messages
12,025
Reaction score
12,605
Location
SE. Mass.
Vehicles
2022 Lightning Lariat-ER Max Tow & 2024 Harley-Davidson Road Glide CVO-ST
Occupation
Retired
I 'm a guy who's first vehicle was an early 70's F100, 45 years of F series pickups, I just never felt this level of need in a TRUCK.
 

3121

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 17, 2023
Threads
2
Messages
107
Reaction score
103
Location
SoCal
Vehicles
F150 Lightning Lariat
I had faith in the parking pawl, but nice to accommodate the masses, I must be in the minority of opinionated folk.
Yeah I think ford engineers set the truck up to enable the parking brake when it’s needed. The pawl is burly so I’m not worried about it carrying weight.
 

Jim Lewis

Well-known member
First Name
Jim
Joined
Jan 10, 2023
Threads
40
Messages
800
Reaction score
671
Location
San Antonio, TX
Vehicles
Honda Accord 2017; 2023 Lariat ER
Occupation
Retired
I 'm a guy who's first vehicle was an early 70's F100, 45 years of F series pickups, I just never felt this level of need in a TRUCK.
We have a neighbor who could have used an automatic parking brake. I don't know the details, but she left her vehicle in the garage with the vehicle, obviously not in Park or the parking brake set. What she did with her fob was never made clear. She walked into her kitchen with the fob, the vehicle rolled out of her garage, across the driveway, down a hill through a neighbor's front yard, over a sidewalk, across an intersection, then colliding with a very sturdy metal street sign set into the ground in a couple of feet of concrete on the opposite side of the intersection. Otherwise, the vehicle might have kept going and crashed into the front of a house abutting that intersection. Luckily, no one was walking by on any of the sidewalks, and no other cars were at a normally fairly busy intersection. The fob was vaguely blamed as the cause of the accident (perhaps because in the days of the keyed ignitions, you couldn't take your key out of the vehicle unless you put the vehicle in Park). She also once had a guest who got out of his vehicle not in Park. This time the guy's SUV rolled straight down the driveway and knocked over a neighbor's brick mailbox pillar. The guy similarly should have set his vehicle in Park and set the handbrake before he emerged from his vehicle.

IIRC, back around the 1950s, someone was getting out of their GM vehicle. They had pulled their key from the ignition and assumed that shut the vehicle off (it had to be in the ignition to make the car run, after all! :D ). But the vehicle was still running and, in sliding across the driver's seat to get out, somehow through the steering wheel gear shift, they knocked the car into Drive. The vehicle lurched forward, running someone over. There was a suit against GM, IIRC, as to why GM didn't do something to mechanically prevent such accidents. The result was the safety standard that required vehicles to be put in Park to remove the key from the ignition. A similar big lawsuit is waiting to happen with fobs, IMHO.

Rollaway: The Safety Problem that Doesn’t Go Away - Newsome | Melton Law (newsomelaw.com)

If no one's in the driver's seat, the vehicle should take steps to make sure it doesn't roll away. And you could just have the electronics reverse the park lock when a driver of sufficient size gets back into the driver's seat and puts their foot on the brake, or something like that. (just suggesting the general idea, ignoring details).

The other problem with ICE vehicles is carbon monoxide poisoning from people who don't realize they've left their vehicles running in the garage when they walk away with the fob. The following article says that Congress has directed NHSTA to solve both the carbon monoxide problem and the runaway problem. With EVs, we don't face the CO problem.

Congress Forces NHTSA to Address Keyless Safety Hazards. One Automaker’s Approach Shows Why Regulations Matter - Safety Research & Strategies, Inc.
 
Last edited:

Sponsored

Maquis

Well-known member
First Name
Dave
Joined
May 20, 2021
Threads
8
Messages
3,363
Reaction score
4,186
Location
Illinois
Vehicles
2021 Mach-E E4-X; 2023 Lightning Lariat ER
We have a neighbor who could have used an automatic parking brake. I don't know the details, but she left her vehicle in the garage with the vehicle, obviously not in Park or the parking brake set. What she did with her fob was never made clear. She walked into her kitchen with the fob, the vehicle rolled out of her garage, across the driveway, down a hill through a neighbor's front yard, over a sidewalk, across an intersection, then colliding with a very sturdy metal street sign set into the ground in a couple of feet of concrete on the opposite side of the intersection. Otherwise, the vehicle might have kept going and crashed into the front of a house abutting that intersection. Luckily, no one was walking by on any of the sidewalks, and no other cars were at a normally fairly busy intersection. The fob was vaguely blamed as the cause of the accident (perhaps because in the days of the keyed ignitions, you couldn't take your key out of the vehicle unless you put the vehicle in Park). She also once had a guest who got out of his vehicle not in Park. This time the guy's SUV rolled straight down the driveway and knocked over a neighbor's brick mailbox pillar. The guy similarly should have set his vehicle in Park and set the handbrake before he emerged from his vehicle.

IIRC, back around the 1950s, someone was getting out of their GM vehicle. They had pulled their key from the ignition and assumed that shut the vehicle off (it had to be in the ignition to make the car run, after all! :D ). But the vehicle was still running and, in sliding across the driver's seat to get out, somehow through the steering wheel gear shift, they knocked the car into Drive. The vehicle lurched forward, running someone over. There was a suit against GM, IIRC, as to why GM didn't do something to mechanically prevent such accidents. The result was the safety standard that required vehicles to be put in Park to remove the key from the ignition. A similar big lawsuit is waiting to happen with fobs, IMHO.

Rollaway: The Safety Problem that Doesn’t Go Away - Newsome | Melton Law (newsomelaw.com)

If no one's in the driver's seat, the vehicle should take steps to make sure it doesn't roll away. And you could just have the electronics reverse the park lock when a driver of sufficient size gets back into the driver's seat and puts their foot on the brake, or something like that. (just suggesting the general idea, ignoring details).

The other problem with ICE vehicles is carbon monoxide poisoning from people who don't realize they've left their vehicles running in the garage when they walk away with the fob. The following article says that Congress has directed NHSTA to solve both the carbon monoxide problem and the runaway problem. With EVs, we don't face the CO problem.

Congress Forces NHTSA to Address Keyless Safety Hazards. One Automaker’s Approach Shows Why Regulations Matter - Safety Research & Strategies, Inc.
That can’t happen with the Lightning since it automatically goes into Park when it’s shut off.
 

Tony Burgh

Well-known member
First Name
Tony
Joined
Sep 28, 2021
Threads
17
Messages
858
Reaction score
957
Location
Western Pennsylvania
Vehicles
22 Lariat ER
Occupation
Retired
I 'm a guy who's first vehicle was an early 70's F100, 45 years of F series pickups, I just never felt this level of need in a TRUCK.
Same as you, Ford trucks for last 40+ years. I got into the habit of stepping on the parking brake since all but last two trucks were manuals. Also, if you did “exercise” the parking brake occasionally it would freeze up with rust in the cable line.
 

TaxmanHog

Moderator
Moderator
First Name
Noel
Joined
Jan 19, 2022
Threads
169
Messages
12,025
Reaction score
12,605
Location
SE. Mass.
Vehicles
2022 Lightning Lariat-ER Max Tow & 2024 Harley-Davidson Road Glide CVO-ST
Occupation
Retired
It amazes me the level of need in current generations, the ineptitude of many generations and lack of common sense overall as law sharks are roaming aimlessly about this mayhem.
 

TaxmanHog

Moderator
Moderator
First Name
Noel
Joined
Jan 19, 2022
Threads
169
Messages
12,025
Reaction score
12,605
Location
SE. Mass.
Vehicles
2022 Lightning Lariat-ER Max Tow & 2024 Harley-Davidson Road Glide CVO-ST
Occupation
Retired
Good night folks .......
 
  • Haha
Reactions: GDN

Jim Lewis

Well-known member
First Name
Jim
Joined
Jan 10, 2023
Threads
40
Messages
800
Reaction score
671
Location
San Antonio, TX
Vehicles
Honda Accord 2017; 2023 Lariat ER
Occupation
Retired
That can’t happen with the Lightning since it automatically goes into Park when it’s shut off.
The story of the woman's car "evolved" as time passed. When I first heard about it, she left it running and in neutral when she ran back into the house to get something she forgot. From the initial gossip, she didn't think the slope of the garage was sufficient to have the car start rolling out. Then about six months later, at a neighborhood association meeting, when a member of the audience asked about the expense of repairing the street sign, a board member glossing over the accident seemed to imply that the woman had somehow started the car with the fob from her kitchen - saying it was a valuable lesson for us all to be careful how we handle our fobs and how close we keep them to the vehicle.... At least her insurance fully repaid the neighborhood for what was her carelessness, IMHO.

While trying to find the history of the 1950s accident I mentioned in my previous post, I found in NY State, it's against the law for an owner to leave his vehicle unattended without removing the key and setting the parking brake. If you leave the key or fob in the vehicle, you can be held responsible for any damage done with the vehicle even if someone steals it and causes the damage!

The Key in Ignition Rule: Leaving Your Car Unattended Under VTL § 1210(a) (mdafny.com)
Sponsored

 
 





Top