stefan9107
New member
Saw another one today where some minor celebrity had the brakes fail on theirs whilst approaching a red light. Didn't read the article, but it seems a lot of I Pace issues are coming to the surface recently.
After close to 10,000 mlles on a full BEV I don't see this as an issue. For sure most braking is done as 1 pedal if you opt for that mode, but you still use the disk brakes frequently when anticipation isn't enough. You also need to press the pedal even to start the car, so that excercises the pistons.scm said:A lot of "brake fail" is likely due to rotors rusting up due to "one-pedal driving" which relies on regen to slow the car. There's stuff about EVs that takes some getting used to - you can't drive them like an EV and then expect them to behave like an ICEV.
cj10jeeper said:After close to 10,000 mlles on a full BEV I don't see this as an issue. For sure most braking is done as 1 pedal if you opt for that mode, but you still use the disk brakes frequently when anticipation isn't enough. You also need the press the pedal even to start the car, so that exercises the pistons.scm said:A lot of "brake fail" is likely due to rotors rusting up due to "one-pedal driving" which relies on regen to slow the car. There's stuff about EVs that takes some getting used to - you can't drive them like an EV and then expect them to behave like an ICEV.
It certainly takes getting used to 1 pedal driving, but you soon adapt to it, just as we do the manual Vs auto, diesel to petrol, etc.
PhilB said:Back in 2018 I was at my dealer and they had an iPace in as a demo.
The test route they used was 9 miles around the block so to speak.
Salesman told me that on full charge after 9 miles (they were giving it the full beans) it had reduced to 35% so this incident does seem a bit strange.
For any body who thinks that EV's are environmentally friendly then google the "Polestar report on EV's" where they come clean (pardon the pun) about the true CO2 footprint from day one of manufacture and the additional 10-12 tons of CO2 that manufacturing the battery produces before it turns a wheel.
A new petrol car has a carbon footprint that's lower than an EV until it's done around 50,000 miles in this country with current electricity supply makeup.
A brief synopsis on the report from an Autocar article here:
https://www.autocar.co.uk/car-news/business/analysis-polestar-lifts-lid-lifetime-ev-emissions
There are a lot of incovenient truths about EV's.
A recent senate hearing in the US was told that if every country reached a target of 50% EV's on their roads by 2030 it would reduce global average temperatures by 2090 by 0.0002 % of one degree F.
EV's are not the answer and that's before you get into ethical questions about how Lithium is mined and other matters.
MajorTom said:Doesn't surprise me at all. Going all EV was relevant marketing talk a few years ago but I never really believed they'd let go of ICE entirely in 2025. They're not stupid. It also won't surprise me if we one day in a not too distant future will see a successor to the F-Type with an all ICE or hybrid drivetrain.