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216.132.251.37 18:13, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
what was the first bmw to have this? and do all >2000 bmw's have it? -- 72.139.114.66 00:07, 6 November 2007 (UTC)
Why mention the German name for it? Why not other languages too? Is there something superior or significant about the German term?
Were the ECU changes really intended to _ban_ Traction Control? I thought it was merely a consequence of the standardized ECU design for 2008. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 76.101.18.213 ( talk) 15:54, 9 November 2007 (UTC)
23:45, 11 June 2013 (UTC)
Does anyone know enough to add rail applications? Talltim ( talk) 16:16, 26 April 2008 (UTC)
Traction Control Systems do NOT work when cornering. TCS/ASR merely monitor the difference in rotational road wheel speed between driven axles compared to non-driven axles. "Cross axle" monitoring is sometimes called "Electronic Differential Lock" or EDL, and may be an addition to TCS, but is not a standard component (or design function) of TCS. -- Teutonic_Tamer ( talk to Teutonic_Tamer) 07:27, 14 May 2008 (UTC)
I refer to brake intervention traction control. I have done detailed research into a Continental Teves ABS/TC system and I can confirm that it does activate when cornering in a Landrover NOT fitted with a steering wheel sensor or yaw sensor. When driving the particular vehicle on full steering lock in a circle, TC was activated upon the detection different wheel speeds despite no wheel spin. The brake intervention alarmingly caused skidding on a frosty tarmac car park. Other systems/cars may be more sophisticated and I can not comment on the effect at higher speed. Quattroheaven ( talk) 21:11, 31 August 2008 (UTC)
Brake Intervention TC re-directing torque: This is in fact a myth. The application of a brake to a spinning wheel does not re-direct talk as so many jounalists think. It applies a negative torque which slows the engine. Torque will not transfer via the differential to the opposite wheel, until the brake force is the equivalent of the force required for forward motion. But this force would stall the engine (so TC is disengaged as the loss of engine revs are detected). Torque transfer IS achieved by adding addition torque (throttle) to overcome the brake force and create forward motion (i.e. twice the original torque required). This means that only half the engines torque is available for forward motion meaning that the climbing angle in these circumstances is halfed. In practice, a driver can not add throttle at the exact time the TC activates, and too much throttle at the wrong time is likely to cause a loss of traction. However, in some stationery situation, with relatively good traction at one wheel, continueing to apply throttle may transfer torque. However this technique is DANGEROUS as when the brake intervention is released, the engine will deliver twice the torque and so sent the vehicle forward in a violent manner if traction is found. A mechanical diff-lock does not loose any torque available for forward motion. Tc also is deactivated to prevent over heating of the brakes (and it doesn't last long). In demanding off-road conditions, the Society of Automotive Engineers do not recomend TC brake intervention as an alternative a mechanical differential lock. In a recent court case, Landrover's own expert and an independent expert, conceded that TC as a Diff-Lock would not function in soft ground steeper than approx 6 degrees due to the loss of torque for the vehicle in case. Quattroheaven ( talk) 21:45, 31 August 2008 (UTC)
Actually, you're wrong Quattroheaven. I may only be a student, and an Electrical Engineer, not a Mechanical one, but I'm developing a traction control system for my school's
Baja SAE team. True, it's not a true car, it's more like a dune buggie weighing only about 300 pounds or so, so the physics of how the traction control will operate is different than a full sized car (you don't have as much inertia). Also, it's different in that it's an off road vehicle and the traction control is meant to provide a different purpose. My traction control system is meant to activate only under near-total traction loss. Mostly this occurs when one wheel leaves the ground. When this happens nearly all of the engine torque is directed to the wheel in the air and almost none to the wheel on the ground. My traction control system is meant to apply a brake to the airborne wheel, transferring torque to the wheel on the ground, and thus restoring drive power. This is very effective and is proven to work well with this sort of car for off road environments. Basically what this traction control system is doing is making a sort of automatic
cutting brake. A cutting brake manually does this. The driver basically will "feel" when the wheel has left the ground and apply the cutting brake to it. This is essential for rock crawl events, and is very effective in a race. Now this same traction control for a street vehicle, it may not be as effective, but it is very effective for off road applications.
tractrpl
15:01, 12 April 2009 (UTC) —Preceding
unsigned comment added by
Tractrpl (
talk •
contribs)
It seems that a lot of the discussion is between these two systems
It looks as though ASR and TC are slightly different things.
ASR to the layman would probably mean a specific function of TC eg 4X4 at low speeds in mud/sand/ice etc and your average family car in snow/ice/mud, whereas TC in cars is a more general term which would include any system using high speed control for high end cars such as Ferraris and F1 cars at higher speeds under hard acceleration.
My Alfa has ASR and it is front wheel drive, if driven hard on a roundabout in the rain, the wheels will spin up and ASR light flicker on and off. Without ASR it is unlikely that the wheels will spin up under acceleration unless from a standng start. The Ferrari I drive (occasionally) has ASR and without ASR it will spin up in the dry at 60mph on that same roundabout under hard acceleration. I would say that although labelled ASR that is more TC
There is also the fact that this article may be edited in future to include trains, bulldozers and anything else that uses traction control.
I suggest either new sub sections or new articles for ASR and for TC in F1/Motorsport and division of the various TC for this article into "Examples of TC"
I believe that the Wiki guide is for "generally accepted terms" and in this case it would mostly be how the general public view these things which should determine how the whole article is handled, not necessarily needing these arguments to define exactly which one is the winner
Perhaps this is where the arguments are occuring and maybe a fix is to separate these in some way... Chaosdruid ( talk) 19:09, 20 September 2009 (UTC)
for On-road vehicles; Does traction control reduce engine braking if RPMs are high, by injecting more gas into the cylinders? As you know, aggressive engine braking on slippery surfaces can result in wheel slip on the drive wheels. Will the traction control system increase gas to reduce wheel slip? — Preceding unsigned comment added by 184.76.47.120 ( talk) 04:15, 26 September 2012 (UTC)
This article is rated C-class on Wikipedia's
content assessment scale. It is of interest to the following WikiProjects: | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
216.132.251.37 18:13, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
what was the first bmw to have this? and do all >2000 bmw's have it? -- 72.139.114.66 00:07, 6 November 2007 (UTC)
Why mention the German name for it? Why not other languages too? Is there something superior or significant about the German term?
Were the ECU changes really intended to _ban_ Traction Control? I thought it was merely a consequence of the standardized ECU design for 2008. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 76.101.18.213 ( talk) 15:54, 9 November 2007 (UTC)
23:45, 11 June 2013 (UTC)
Does anyone know enough to add rail applications? Talltim ( talk) 16:16, 26 April 2008 (UTC)
Traction Control Systems do NOT work when cornering. TCS/ASR merely monitor the difference in rotational road wheel speed between driven axles compared to non-driven axles. "Cross axle" monitoring is sometimes called "Electronic Differential Lock" or EDL, and may be an addition to TCS, but is not a standard component (or design function) of TCS. -- Teutonic_Tamer ( talk to Teutonic_Tamer) 07:27, 14 May 2008 (UTC)
I refer to brake intervention traction control. I have done detailed research into a Continental Teves ABS/TC system and I can confirm that it does activate when cornering in a Landrover NOT fitted with a steering wheel sensor or yaw sensor. When driving the particular vehicle on full steering lock in a circle, TC was activated upon the detection different wheel speeds despite no wheel spin. The brake intervention alarmingly caused skidding on a frosty tarmac car park. Other systems/cars may be more sophisticated and I can not comment on the effect at higher speed. Quattroheaven ( talk) 21:11, 31 August 2008 (UTC)
Brake Intervention TC re-directing torque: This is in fact a myth. The application of a brake to a spinning wheel does not re-direct talk as so many jounalists think. It applies a negative torque which slows the engine. Torque will not transfer via the differential to the opposite wheel, until the brake force is the equivalent of the force required for forward motion. But this force would stall the engine (so TC is disengaged as the loss of engine revs are detected). Torque transfer IS achieved by adding addition torque (throttle) to overcome the brake force and create forward motion (i.e. twice the original torque required). This means that only half the engines torque is available for forward motion meaning that the climbing angle in these circumstances is halfed. In practice, a driver can not add throttle at the exact time the TC activates, and too much throttle at the wrong time is likely to cause a loss of traction. However, in some stationery situation, with relatively good traction at one wheel, continueing to apply throttle may transfer torque. However this technique is DANGEROUS as when the brake intervention is released, the engine will deliver twice the torque and so sent the vehicle forward in a violent manner if traction is found. A mechanical diff-lock does not loose any torque available for forward motion. Tc also is deactivated to prevent over heating of the brakes (and it doesn't last long). In demanding off-road conditions, the Society of Automotive Engineers do not recomend TC brake intervention as an alternative a mechanical differential lock. In a recent court case, Landrover's own expert and an independent expert, conceded that TC as a Diff-Lock would not function in soft ground steeper than approx 6 degrees due to the loss of torque for the vehicle in case. Quattroheaven ( talk) 21:45, 31 August 2008 (UTC)
Actually, you're wrong Quattroheaven. I may only be a student, and an Electrical Engineer, not a Mechanical one, but I'm developing a traction control system for my school's
Baja SAE team. True, it's not a true car, it's more like a dune buggie weighing only about 300 pounds or so, so the physics of how the traction control will operate is different than a full sized car (you don't have as much inertia). Also, it's different in that it's an off road vehicle and the traction control is meant to provide a different purpose. My traction control system is meant to activate only under near-total traction loss. Mostly this occurs when one wheel leaves the ground. When this happens nearly all of the engine torque is directed to the wheel in the air and almost none to the wheel on the ground. My traction control system is meant to apply a brake to the airborne wheel, transferring torque to the wheel on the ground, and thus restoring drive power. This is very effective and is proven to work well with this sort of car for off road environments. Basically what this traction control system is doing is making a sort of automatic
cutting brake. A cutting brake manually does this. The driver basically will "feel" when the wheel has left the ground and apply the cutting brake to it. This is essential for rock crawl events, and is very effective in a race. Now this same traction control for a street vehicle, it may not be as effective, but it is very effective for off road applications.
tractrpl
15:01, 12 April 2009 (UTC) —Preceding
unsigned comment added by
Tractrpl (
talk •
contribs)
It seems that a lot of the discussion is between these two systems
It looks as though ASR and TC are slightly different things.
ASR to the layman would probably mean a specific function of TC eg 4X4 at low speeds in mud/sand/ice etc and your average family car in snow/ice/mud, whereas TC in cars is a more general term which would include any system using high speed control for high end cars such as Ferraris and F1 cars at higher speeds under hard acceleration.
My Alfa has ASR and it is front wheel drive, if driven hard on a roundabout in the rain, the wheels will spin up and ASR light flicker on and off. Without ASR it is unlikely that the wheels will spin up under acceleration unless from a standng start. The Ferrari I drive (occasionally) has ASR and without ASR it will spin up in the dry at 60mph on that same roundabout under hard acceleration. I would say that although labelled ASR that is more TC
There is also the fact that this article may be edited in future to include trains, bulldozers and anything else that uses traction control.
I suggest either new sub sections or new articles for ASR and for TC in F1/Motorsport and division of the various TC for this article into "Examples of TC"
I believe that the Wiki guide is for "generally accepted terms" and in this case it would mostly be how the general public view these things which should determine how the whole article is handled, not necessarily needing these arguments to define exactly which one is the winner
Perhaps this is where the arguments are occuring and maybe a fix is to separate these in some way... Chaosdruid ( talk) 19:09, 20 September 2009 (UTC)
for On-road vehicles; Does traction control reduce engine braking if RPMs are high, by injecting more gas into the cylinders? As you know, aggressive engine braking on slippery surfaces can result in wheel slip on the drive wheels. Will the traction control system increase gas to reduce wheel slip? — Preceding unsigned comment added by 184.76.47.120 ( talk) 04:15, 26 September 2012 (UTC)