![]() Usually an unpleasant, scary noise as the brake breaks free. you go to hospital or on holiday) and you leave your car there for a couple of weeks, you may equally get a nice surprise upon returning. Likewise, if you park your car with parking brake engaged and something happens (something, anything, like. ![]() The parking brake has the downside that if you engage it during winter (outside, not in your garage) and you come back some hours later, you may get a funny surprise for free because now your car is unusable with a frozen-up parking brake. The reverse gear is more difficult to engage, it will cause the white light on the back of your car to light up (which is irritating to others!) and it is more stressful overall. I've used nothing else for two decades (well, I'd say 3 decades, but since about a decade I'm only driving on manual transmission occasionally so that doesn't count). And since it is just good enough, there's no need to do anything else. The first gear is preferrable insofar as it is easier to engage, less obnoxious to the transmission levers, and less irritating to other traffic participants. The reverse gear also works, and in theory would be "even better" (some super smart cars indeed force you to use that one), although when something is already perfectly good, then there is no such thing as "even better". The first gear is mighty fine for holding your car in place. Yes, your driving instructor tells you that, but either way. That being said, the parking brake, in my opinion, shouldn't be used for parking in the first place. On a modern brake, prepare to pull your wallet. Open screws, pull cable a bit tighter, close screws, done. On a "traditional" parking brake, there's an iron wire attached to the lever with two screws. ![]() Modern parking brakes are a kind of nuisance in that respect because nowadays everything must be "smart" with microchips, blinking lights, and little electro motors. If the parking brake is engaged and the car still rolls downhill, the brake is either broken or adjusted badly. no gear engaged) then it is very normal for the car to roll downhill if the parking brake is not engaged. Unless the street is frozen with ice, a car normally never slides downhill.) (Assuming that "sliding" is an unintentional wording. So in a newer car put it in reverse going uphill and first going downhill. ![]() Newer, electronically controlled engines won't run without the computer so this isn't an issue and you are better doing the opposite as may damage the engine. In older cars this was important as spinning the engine could cause it to start without the ignition being turned as they had mechanical fuel pumps and ignition systems. What I was always taught, and what was in the NY State DMV handbook when I took my driving test many years ago was to put the transmission in reverse gear when parked downhill and in a forward gear when uphill, this is so the car rolling will work against the engine's normal rotation. It's a safety issue that will make your car fail an inspection, and rightly so, if it won't stop your car from rolling down a hill it won't stop your car if your main brakes fail.Īs to reverse and forward there is no single answer. ![]() This can be caused by worn brake shoes, the cable could be stretched out or the mechanisms are worn, all are (generally) straightforward to fix. It should fully stop the car even when on a steep hill. It isn't normal that the car moves downhill with the parking brake applied, if it does it shows that the parking brake isn't working properly. ![]()
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