Bullwinkle
Well-Known Member
Down shifting and regen can be feathered, but they do not have the ability of ABS to keep the car going where it is pointed. When drivers have multiple cars at home, radically different inputs and behavior should not be required when traction is lost in an emergency situation...especially true with inexperienced drivers.Damn, sorry to hear that OP.
I see a lot of people talking about no regen as the solution but I'd suggest that is not the right way to think about the problem. I have always used shifting into lower gears as a way to control my speed in ICE vehicles because it is less likely to cause a skid. Regen braking is the EV analogue, the problem is getting used to it and being much more deliberate with how you use your right foot. Never hard-lift off the throttle. Always roll-off, with the speed determined by the conditions. I don't mind Rivian offering a no regen option for folks, but I don't think no regen and all brakes is going to be safer unless you're unwilling to learn and use the one pedal driving technique.
To be fair, I think Rivian and other EV makers should do more to educate new EV owners about this type of thing. I've found it hard to retrain the muscle memory from ICE driving and in a situation like OP's I might have made the same mistake. I have actually practiced this on a snowy hill to get a feel for traction under regen but muscle memory takes time to retrain and sometimes you only have a split-second to decide how to react.
On real ice almost any amount of clutch or regen can induce a skid, and without the benefit of ABS. Feathering the clutch frequently certainly causes a lot of wear.
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