andix
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Feb 10, 2021
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- Location
- Munich, Germany
- Vehicles
- 991.1 S, Taycan Turbo (4/21), others
What if the whole thing is fake?
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That’s an interesting theory, but I think the OP meant the outside break pipe that goes to one of the wheelsCan I offer a theory as to what happened here? Having gone through the Audi J1 self study guide I think I know what happened.
They Taycan has a mostly brake by wire system. When you depress the brake on a "normal" car, a mechanical linkage compresses the fluid in the brake master cylinder, ignoring any power boost for the moment. In the Taycan, when you depress the brake pedal, you are compressing fluid in the brake pedal itself in normal normal cases there is no connection to the actual master cylinder. The braking ECU then interprets the pressure you are creating and determines how much regen and physical braking to apply based on the amount of pressure you are creating.
There is a backup in the event that the ECU fails, a direct hydraulic connection from the brake pedal to the master cylinder controlling the mechanical brakes allowing a minimal amount of braking, but only when the brake pedal is near the floor. It has to reach a threshold pressure in the pedal assembly to open the valve enabling this connection.
This is the tube that likely split. The ECU would see no pressure and you've lost the physical connection resulting in a total brake failure. It also explains the brake fluid on the floor inside the vehicle. (I've had a brake line split and cause this kind of total loss of braking and was only able to avoid rear ending a stopped bus by driving into a snow filled ditch.)
I'm not particularly worried about this happening to our Taycan though. There are billions of brake tubes and hoses in the world and a one in a million manufacturing defect is just that. Until another Taycan or Audi GT suffers this same issue I'll consider this a freak occurrence. If it happens a couple of more times, well, then I'll want a recall.
The practical takeaway as posted upthread is to know that the park button will initiate an emergency stop if you press and hold it.
I took his "pedal hit the floor ... brake fluid all over the floor" in post six to mean floor of the car and not on the ground.That’s an interesting theory, but I think the OP meant the outside break pipe that goes to one of the wheels
The thought has crossed my mind, too. There are a few “hmm” flags, we’ll see where this goes. Still an interesting thread.What if the whole thing is fake?
I really like the brake by wire theory also, except Clive said repeatedly that the dealer found a split flex hose (the one that goes from the hard brake line to the caliper). The dealer will call that a hose, and will call the hard part a "line." Maybe there was a miscommunication with the dealer. Clive said the "nr" corner, which isn't a corner, as opposed to, say, "fr." So yes, by "all over the floor" he might have meant "all over the ground." Maybe we'll get clarification.I took his "pedal hit the floor ... brake fluid all over the floor" in post six to mean floor of the car and not on the ground.
But we're all often unreliable narrators so you could be right.
I wonder, will jabbing the "P" button in an emergency engage the parking brake?
Same. Good source post: Brake Symptom – Brake Pedal Travel Perceived as “Too Long” Just Before the Vehicle Comes to a Standstill: Observe Specified Procedure (SY 90/21)I recently had the car serviced for this issue ... and bled the brake lInes. Brakes felt like a completely new car after this and the grinding noise is gone.
What if the whole thing is fake?
I really like the brake by wire theory also, except Clive said repeatedly that the dealer found a split flex hose (the one that goes from the hard brake line to the caliper). The dealer will call that a hose, and will call the hard part a "line." Maybe there was a miscommunication with the dealer. Clive said the "nr" corner, which isn't a corner, as opposed to, say, "fr." So yes, by "all over the floor" he might have meant "all over the ground." Maybe we'll get clarification.
I find it the string of comments about the Taycan’s regen braking being “strong”. We have a ‘21 Taycan 4S and ‘23 VW ID.4. The VW regen in B (driving BRAKE mode) will slow you to a stop. The Taycan in regen would take us more than a half mile to slow in a meaningful way. Maybe our regen isn’t fun functioning properly. Yes, we can tell when regen is on vs off, but it almost sounds by some posts that regeneration could stop the car? In our case, never. I suspect feedback to this post will lead us to a service appointment.Losing all brakes is definitely a horrifying experience. At least Taycan has fairly strong regen braking (way stronger than Tesla) which I assume is a good backup at higher speeds. Maybe I'm just overly paranoid (cutting brake lines is a movie classic) but I hope this wasn't sabotage. Porsche should be able to detect if that's the case (and call the police if they suspect it).
You are using Tesla's definition of "regen", applying it to VW. Teslas only regen when you take the foot off the pedal. Tesla brake pedal controls the mechanical brakes directly (so if you are pressing the brake pedal, you are stopping with mechanical brakes). Taycan on the other hand regens (or recuperates, per Porsche terminology) both when you take your foot off the accelerator and when you press the brake pedal. The latter is much stronger, taking your foot off the accelerator enables very small amount of regen. Tesla maximum regen is ~60KW, Taycan 270KW. Of course to reach that 270KW of slowdown you will have to hit the brake pedal. Putting this much regen on the accelerator lift would translate to horrible experience (imagine your car auto slams on brakes when you lift off the accelerator, or simply imagine 5x the braking force whatever you have today on the ID.4 when lifting off the accelerator). Heck, every time you lift your foot to move to the brake pedal, you'd already be braking very hard.I find it the string of comments about the Taycan’s regen braking being “strong”. We have a ‘21 Taycan 4S and ‘23 VW ID.4. The VW regen in B (driving BRAKE mode) will slow you to a stop. The Taycan in regen would take us more than a half mile to slow in a meaningful way. Maybe our regen isn’t fun functioning properly. Yes, we can tell when regen is on vs off, but it almost sounds by some posts that regeneration could stop the car? In our case, never. I suspect feedback to this post will lead us to a service appointment.
One pedal/bumper car driving is NOT REGEN!I find it the string of comments about the Taycan’s regen braking being “strong”. We have a ‘21 Taycan 4S and ‘23 VW ID.4. The VW regen in B (driving BRAKE mode) will slow you to a stop. The Taycan in regen would take us more than a half mile to slow in a meaningful way. Maybe our regen isn’t fun functioning properly. Yes, we can tell when regen is on vs off, but it almost sounds by some posts that regeneration could stop the car? In our case, never. I suspect feedback to this post will lead us to a service appointment.