Home > Technical (L460) > Brake hold purpose? |
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Autobiography Member Since: 10 May 2011 Location: UK Posts: 922 |
So you don’t need to keep your foot on the brake at traffic lights… |
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2nd Dec 2023 7:34am |
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D3fin4 Member Since: 30 Oct 2023 Location: Gold Coast Posts: 16 |
Thanks, I just found this explanation too:
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2nd Dec 2023 7:42am |
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Haylands Member Since: 04 Mar 2014 Location: East Yorkshire Posts: 8186 |
I always use the queue assist in heavy traffic, no need to brake at all, car holds itself still, pulls away with the slightest touch on the accelerator.... IMHO one of it's best features... Pete
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2nd Dec 2023 8:15am |
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D3fin4 Member Since: 30 Oct 2023 Location: Gold Coast Posts: 16 |
Oh… I haven’t seen queue assist in settings yet.. will check the guide for this one too. Thanks. |
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2nd Dec 2023 1:29pm |
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Haylands Member Since: 04 Mar 2014 Location: East Yorkshire Posts: 8186 |
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2nd Dec 2023 7:34pm |
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p38arover Member Since: 16 Dec 2015 Location: Western Sydney Posts: 1523 |
Sounds like the feature that was on my old 1955/56 Jaguar Mark VII auto. It was great, especially when stopped, facing downhill, in traffic. Ron B. VK2OTC
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2nd Dec 2023 10:36pm |
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Westminster Member Since: 23 Mar 2017 Location: UK Posts: 135 |
Mine was also enabled and although it was nice at the traffic lights, it made nudging forward in a parking space (after you'd stopped short and Brake Hold had applied itself) a bit of a hairy exercise as you had to accelerate to overcome the brake hold and then quickly brake before you hit the wall. It is actually not needed anyway, because unlike my 2020 L405, in the L460 if you come to a stop at the lights and press the brake pedal harder than normal, the green HOLD light will come on anyway and you can then remove your foot from the brake ready to accelerate when the lights change. |
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2nd Jan 2024 5:40pm |
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Flugplatz Member Since: 27 Feb 2014 Location: Cornwall Posts: 75 |
As with sooo many aspects of JLR tech, the 'hold' function isn't quite up to the job. That you have to configure it via various levels of menu is odd when it's been a std feature of Mercs etc for over 12 years. But the biggest issue is that it doesn't release smoothly enough. If you're parallel parking, say, it feels like you have to extraordinarily gently apply the throttle otherwise the car springs forward once the 'tension' of hold is suddenly released. Other marques do this far better and more intuitively. Calibration of throttle generally is awful (D350) and particularly in the 'hold' function. In this regard, RR product is miles off the quality of Merc/BMW/Porsche etc. Even our 6 year old A160 station car knocks spots off the Rangie. Until Tata is replaced by a proper automotive parent with deeper pockets and less of the "that'll do" mentality, we grin and bear it. Shame, as the core product idea of a Rangie is still unsurpassed by any of the competition. FP |
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7th Apr 2024 7:20pm |
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Phil. Member Since: 19 Apr 2010 Location: West Midlands Posts: 784 |
That’s my experience too which is why the hold function is turned off permanently. It then holds well at junctions and on inclines. I guess the only time worth using the hold function is when towing something heavy? MY23 D350 HSE
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8th Apr 2024 5:54am |
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