Technical accelleration

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Technical accelleration

A little(ok a lot) about ASR,SC,TC,ESP and all the other nicknames for traction control.

In order for the car to detect loss of traction it needs some sensors. These come in various different forms and determine how the car is behaving, and what the driver is trying to do. Yaw sensors, gyros, wheel-speed detectors and accelerometers are the most common sensors found in SC systems. In addition, information ranging from steering and pedal position, engine speed and gear selection is used to determine driver inputs.

When the SC system determines that loss of traction is occurring, it acts using the braking and engine management controls (and in some cars even the steering system) to put the car back on track. The system reacts according to a set of preset criteria depending on the nature of the loss of traction, which can include spinning wheels or slides.

Traction control is used to reduce drive loss through spinning wheels. This can occur when driving on slippery surfaces, or when accelerating hard (usually in first gear from a stand still). Traction control reacts by applying the brakes to the spinning wheel and this forces the drive to be diverted to the wheel(s) with the best grip. Traction control usually only operates below a certain speed.

There are two different types of slide understear and overstear. SC systems react to these situations by applying the brakes to individual wheels, and reduce engine torque when appropriate to keep the car on line. During an understeer situation, torque is reduced and the resulting forwards weight transfer is usually enough to regain control, if this is not sufficient to bring the vehicle back in line, individual rear brakes will be applied. When oversteer is occurring, brake force is applied to one of the front wheels, which acts as pivot to bring the car back on line. In general, the brakes are only applied to the wheels which are likely to have the most grip.

Incase u wanted to know.



No ABS just stops the wheels from skidding by applying the brakes on and off faster than a person can.

ASR uses the torque as a first priority for traction regain while ESP uses brakes first, Therefore(IMO) making ASR better and more safe.

Well copied ;)

ESP is different to ASR in function completely.
 
I got hat info from some website linked wikipedia so im not that sure how reliable it actually is. Just thought id try an sound clever cos it dont happen that often but still, no matter what the car manufacturer calls their Traction control it all works on the same principles.
 
I got hat info from some website linked wikipedia so im not that sure how reliable it actually is. Just thought id try an sound clever cos it dont happen that often but still, no matter what the car manufacturer calls their Traction control it all works on the same principles.

Yeah, there are many names for traction control. But from the last part of your post it seemed like you were comparing asr and esp. There different systems as mentioned above. ESP isn't to maintain traction, its to stop slides that can occur from taking bends/islands etc too quickly. It won't prevent wheelspin, thats where ASR kicks in. (y)
 
Yeah, there are many names for traction control. But from the last part of your post it seemed like you were comparing asr and esp. There different systems as mentioned above. ESP isn't to maintain traction, its to stop slides that can occur from taking bends/islands etc too quickly. It won't prevent wheelspin, thats where ASR kicks in. (y)

I willfully stand corrected:eek:
 
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