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Curious why some do not use 1 pedal driving.

Electric Messiah

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I use one pedal sparingly, mostly in stop and go traffic where it's a godsend to not constantly shift from one pedal to the other. Much the rest of the time, Sports Mode is great. Foot off the accelerator is akin to downshifting, there's minimal brake use, and the batteries get rewarded with little shot glasses of regeneration.
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hturnerfamily

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I don't typically use 1pd unless in extreme traffic conditions, which in my rural area is not very often... but, even then, I had a Georgia State Trooper pull me over, feet from my home, as he saw no 'brake lights' thru the past 5 traffic lights thru town... well, it's because I had never USED my brakes, as Sport Mode did just a fine easy job of slowing me down BEFORE every red light, and turning GREEN before I ever needed to touch my foot to the brake pedal... he could hardly believe it, until I proved it by pushing down my brake pedal, where he could then attest that my brake lights actually DID work properly. : )

1pd, for me, is too aggressive, and I like to 'coast' more often... Sport Mode, and sometimes Normal mode, do me just fine... I like not having to use the brakes, but I don't like 1pd aggressiveness.
 

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This is a great question that true to EV biased form, I haven’t seen the real answer.

Which is this, one pedal driving changes the physics of how your truck handles. The most noticeable is that there is a consistent drag on the vehicle. So the inertia of the passenger experience is completely changed vs. 2 pedal.

For example, with 2-pedal driving the operator decides when to apply the brake and with what amount of force, the truck goes into a free roll scenario every so often that is slowed/stopped by brake application.

Compare that to 1 pedal, which applies the force immediately and to the degree it deems necessary, thus eliminating the free roll scenario all together, which passengers are very familiar with.

So the reasons people don’t use it build off of this reality.

1.) the driving/passenger experience is completely different.
2.) the handling of the truck in snow is different and not as good because as it turns out, allowing your truck to free roll as opposed to applying brake the entire time, is better in that circumstance.
3.) backing up and parallel parking is completely different and not as intuitive.

Now it is not to say that these are insurmountable flaws, or that I don’t personally see the value of 1 pedal driving. But it is to say that there are good reasons to avoid using it, and from a bigger picture explains yet another hurdle this truck has faced in gaining widespread adoption. Which is that while this feature is interesting, it also doesn’t come without serious tradings. And those tradeoffs either don’t get recognized by owners or even worse get suppressed by owners, only to have new people entering in the market become disillusioned by the reality of the feature or upset that the full scope of the feature wasn’t explained to them.

tl;dr: 1 pedal driving is not the same as 2 pedal driving with 1 pedal, it features new physics that change how the truck handles, sometimes good, other times bad. This is another feature that divides owners vs would be owners and is a leading response to the question “why aren’t people buying more lightnings” that people would rather not be true.
"1.) the driving/passenger experience is completely different."
I disagree. The amount to which the passengers feel the change is a direct result of how the driver operates the pedals. I guarantee my passengers do not know which mode I use. Smooth is smooth.

2.) the handling of the truck in snow is different and not as good because as it turns out, allowing your truck to free roll as opposed to applying brake the entire time, is better in that circumstance.
Again, I disagree. Free roll is a muscle memory location in OPD and works perfectly when you operate it correctly and you can apply power or deceleration much quicker with movement of one pedal. Personal choice but OPD is not a disadvantage in snow.

3.) backing up and parallel parking is completely different and not as intuitive.
Intuition is built from experience. An automatic transmission constantly pulls and you need to counteract that with brakes. It is not intuitive unless you've been trained that way. EVs are different they only pull when you step on the accelerator and stop when you don't. I'd argue that is more intuitive for a new learner. Us older folks need to relearn some things for it to work.
 

Upstate

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I have seen in some threads that some don't use the 1 pedal driving and I wonder why. I took a 60 mile drive yesterday and only had to use my breaks twice. At the rate I will likely never have to do a brake job. Plus a little energy recovered.
One Pedal Driving was the best unknown (to me) benefit of driving the truck! Try it next time you are in a slow moving traffic jam. It changes the world from frustrating and frantic to calm and easy going! You may still be stuck in traffic, but it's way more zen.
 

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"1.) the driving/passenger experience is completely different."
I disagree. The amount to which the passengers feel the change is a direct result of how the driver operates the pedals. I guarantee my passengers do not know which mode I use. Smooth is smooth.

2.) the handling of the truck in snow is different and not as good because as it turns out, allowing your truck to free roll as opposed to applying brake the entire time, is better in that circumstance.
Again, I disagree. Free roll is a muscle memory location in OPD and works perfectly when you operate it correctly and you can apply power or deceleration much quicker with movement of one pedal. Personal choice but OPD is not a disadvantage in snow.

3.) backing up and parallel parking is completely different and not as intuitive.
Intuition is built from experience. An automatic transmission constantly pulls and you need to counteract that with brakes. It is not intuitive unless you've been trained that way. EVs are different they only pull when you step on the accelerator and stop when you don't. I'd argue that is more intuitive for a new learner. Us older folks need to relearn some things for it to work.

Good day! Here's another example illustrating what I mentioned earlier.

The purpose of this post is to explore why people choose not to use One-Pedal driving.

I’ve outlined three concrete reasons to explain this behavior.

What you’ve done mirrors a common response from early adopters— defending the feature by highlighting how they’ve personally adapted to its drawbacks. And therein lies the issue: this feature, like most, has its pros and cons. Recognizing this balance is crucial for a clearer understanding of the EV truck landscape.

Lastly, your claim about your ability to alter the effects of gravity and friction through your driving technique is certainly one I won’t be forgetting anytime soon.

Hope you have a great day!
 

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Lastly, your claim about your ability to alter the effects of gravity and friction through your driving technique is certainly one I won’t be forgetting anytime soon.
It is quite ok for us to have a difference of opinion. I will however call this comment out. The effects of gravity and friction apply the same to all vehicles and have no bearing on which drive mode you prefer.
 

WHPHLightning

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It is quite ok for us to have a difference of opinion. I will however call this comment out. The effects of gravity and friction apply the same to all vehicles and have no bearing on which drive mode you prefer.
 

WHPHLightning

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You see, this isn’t a matter of opinion, but one of fact.

The feature is based on leveraging gravity and friction to harness it into re-generative power.

What you are saying is that you have found a way to harness the energy, without any changes to the mechanics of the vehicle. That you are able to anticipate, read, and navigate the feature as consistently, effectively, and precisely as it is deployed.

Which is quite impossible.

Now I understand that you probably get close on some trips, depending on your type of travel, which is amazing and requires you to exert for more effort in that dynamic than say doing something else with your brain, but you can choose to do that, a choice most others would not make.

Any time you feel that tug, just know that you weren’t as consistent as you had portrayed. Also, know that you aren’t maximizing the benefits of 1 pedal driving either.

So it’s a double whammy.

Good day.
 

rparry

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Same here.

I occasionally drive an old stick shift Toyota truck at work and my wife's ICE Highlander.

Zero issues transitioning from 1pd to the stick shift. It's too different of an experience to get confused.

Usually the first time I let off the gas pedal in the Highlander and realize that I am not slowing, the 2 pedal driving comes right back. The body/brain connection adjusts to 1pd/2pd switch pretty seamlessly.
I am an OLD driver and I do not have a problem transitioning between my EV with 1 pedal driving and my truck which is old school. The Lightning has not arrived yet. However I do worry a bit about drivers just starting to drive. We have years of reflex training that will come into effect
when needed. If you learn to always drive with 1 pedal drives, the time to hit the mechanical
brakes could be an issue in an emergency. But then there is emergency braking on these cars
so might come out in the wash, but I still think that if new drivers are not allowed to use 1 pedal
drives for say 2 years driving the reflex will be trained.

Bob
 

Firn

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You see, this isn’t a matter of opinion, but one of fact.

The feature is based on leveraging gravity and friction to harness it into re-generative power.

What you are saying is that you have found a way to harness the energy, without any changes to the mechanics of the vehicle. That you are able to anticipate, read, and navigate the feature as consistently, effectively, and precisely as it is deployed.

Which is quite impossible.

Now I understand that you probably get close on some trips, depending on your type of travel, which is amazing and requires you to exert for more effort in that dynamic than say doing something else with your brain, but you can choose to do that, a choice most others would not make.

Any time you feel that tug, just know that you weren’t as consistent as you had portrayed. Also, know that you aren’t maximizing the benefits of 1 pedal driving either.

So it’s a double whammy.

Good day.
What in the world are you talking about? This is the most imprecise and ambiguous statement I have ever seen.

1pd drive and the brake pedal BOTH enact regeneration to slow the vehicle, they both do, there is no difference if you do one or the other.
 

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evowner

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That's something I was wondering about over the weekend when I was driving my ICE Dodge down a moderately steep crappy dirt road from a radio site. In the Dodge I had the transfer case in 4x4 low and the transmission in 2nd gear. I spent more time on the gas pedal than the brake (what I intended). How does this equate to an electric drive that has no transfer case with a low range, and of course regen vs engine braking? I would assume I would be riding the brake pedal (presumably all or mostly actually regen).
OK, here is a little ditty to explain it.
Jack and Jill went up the hill in their Ford Lightning Electric Truck. On their way down they were astounded and found that they didn't have to use the brake one time and have more miles than when they started.
Remember it's just a ditty.
I think John Mellencamp sang it.
 
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Adventureboy

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What you are saying is that you have found a way to harness the energy, without any changes to the mechanics of the vehicle. That you are able to anticipate, read, and navigate the feature as consistently, effectively, and precisely as it is deployed.
Not what I said at all. All EVs have regenerative technology built in and we are all using it on the Lightning. OPD technology is nearly 2 decades old (ie. it is not new). We have a choice to use it or not. Ford has done an excellent job employing regenerative/friction combined braking with both OPD and 2PD giving us a choice on how we use it.
 

RickKeen

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OPD technology is nearly 2 decades old (ie. it is not new)...
Ford has done an excellent job employing regenerative/friction combined braking with both OPD and 2PD ...
As far as I know, none of the other EV's other than Ford have regen blended from the Brake Pedal. They all only do regen from letting off the Accelerator AND always apply friction brakes from the brake pedal.

The Ford brake pedal regen IS a new way of doing it.

(please correct me if I am wrong about the above)
 

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As far as I know, none of the other EV's other than Ford have regen blended from the Brake Pedal. They all only do regen from letting off the Accelerator AND always apply friction brakes from the brake pedal.

The Ford brake pedal regen IS a new way of doing it.

(please correct me if I am wrong about the above)
I believe nearly every EV does it this way. Bolt, rivian, Tesla, they all do it this way.

I highly doubt any evidence manufacture is going to just throw away massive amounts of "free" energy
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