Question regarding the handbrake on new Range Rovers
Question regarding the handbrake on new Range Rovers
Author
Discussion

EdJ

Original Poster:

1,378 posts

217 months

Tuesday 3rd March 2009
quotequote all
When I'm at traffic lights, I put the car into neutral and activate the handbrake. When the lights are about the go green, I put it into drive and let the handbrake hold the car. The handbrake releases when I accelerate.

My question is whether this is bad for the handbrake / clutch? How long can I leave the car in Drive with the handbrake activated?

Thoughts appreciated!

Ed

howlinmadmartin

19 posts

203 months

Thursday 5th March 2009
quotequote all
as far as i know this is just a convenience feature to allow for easy hill starts but im pretty sure that both the hand brake and clutch will be fine. the new disco's do it aswell so nothing to worry about really. smile

Syd knee

3,441 posts

227 months

Thursday 5th March 2009
quotequote all
So which of the 2 pedles is the clutch then?

Lost soul

8,712 posts

204 months

Thursday 5th March 2009
quotequote all
I thought the hand brake on RR-s locked the gearbox , well it did on my old RR circa 92

not sure if its the same set up on newer RR-s but i would not think its good for them if it is the same

GKP

15,099 posts

263 months

Thursday 5th March 2009
quotequote all
The handbrake on L322s operates on the rear wheels. There is a drum (with shoes) inside the brake disc specifically for the parking brake.

howlinmadmartin

19 posts

203 months

Friday 6th March 2009
quotequote all
indeed the hand brake does operate the back wheels. so when you are driving along and hold on the handbrake the car will apply the rear brake to slow the vehicle. it has built in parameters so the vehicle will not damage itself when braking.

EdJ

Original Poster:

1,378 posts

217 months

Friday 6th March 2009
quotequote all
Thanks for replies. Do we have a consensus then that keeping the car in Drive but with the handbrake on at traffic lights is okay?scratchchin

howlinmadmartin

19 posts

203 months

Friday 6th March 2009
quotequote all
yes i think so cant see why not

Aeroresh

1,429 posts

254 months

Friday 6th March 2009
quotequote all
ROSPA advocates leaving in Drive at traffic lights and applying the handbrake. The argument is that you put more wear on the autobox by shifting from neutral to drive than you do leaving it in gear.

I'll usually leave it in drive for a minute or two. Any longer, and I'll pop into neutral.

The servo operated electronic handbrake on the RR does make it easier to hold on the handbrake than conventional cable operated systems so there's no reason not to use it!

Triple7

4,015 posts

259 months

Saturday 7th March 2009
quotequote all
Ed, lots of talk about this, but just leave it in 'D' with EPB on. Shifting into 'N' just causes unnecessary wear on gearbox.

G

g8kam

171 posts

233 months

Sunday 8th March 2009
quotequote all
This question always bothers me,If I knew the red light is going to be more than half a minute, I would shift it into neutral, as I do believe it causes less wear on transmission, obviously i have no proof to back me up, just my head thinks its the right thing to do....

Edited by g8kam on Sunday 8th March 15:16

EdJ

Original Poster:

1,378 posts

217 months

Monday 9th March 2009
quotequote all
Great stuff - thanks all - I can now relax whilst waiting at traffic lights!