LWillmann
03-28-2006, 08:34 AM
I have a question about how the ABS system in a car works. Here's why... I was traveling at MAYBE 60 to 65, when an old man in a Cadillac pulls out in front of me, crossing my lane to turn left (he came from the right side). I swerved left to miss him (around the front of his nose) but he never stopped and I clipped him with the front end of my car on the front of his.
The impact was pretty severe, it pushed the passenger side front wheel backward almost a foot (roughly where the door hinges are), destroyed the front fenter, the door skin and more. The car is totalled. But after impact I had NO brakes. NONE, ZIP, NADA.
Here's my question... If the engine has been running, but dies, does the ABS system continue to function as it should? Will it modulate brake pressure with just the key on, or does the engine HAVE to be actually running for it to operate?
See, in the accident, the front passenger side wheel was pushed backward and was wedged against the chassis of the car and it stopped turning. The only thing I can think of is that when that one wheel stopped turning, the ABS system modulated the brakes and reduced the fluid flow to the remaining wheels, keeping me from stopping the car. The only thing that stopped my car was the one jammed wheel skidding on the ground.
So, does anyone know if the ABS system will continue to function after the engine stops running?
Is there any other logical reason that I could not stop the vehicle even though I was pressing the pedal to the floor as hard as I possibly could?
The impact was pretty severe, it pushed the passenger side front wheel backward almost a foot (roughly where the door hinges are), destroyed the front fenter, the door skin and more. The car is totalled. But after impact I had NO brakes. NONE, ZIP, NADA.
Here's my question... If the engine has been running, but dies, does the ABS system continue to function as it should? Will it modulate brake pressure with just the key on, or does the engine HAVE to be actually running for it to operate?
See, in the accident, the front passenger side wheel was pushed backward and was wedged against the chassis of the car and it stopped turning. The only thing I can think of is that when that one wheel stopped turning, the ABS system modulated the brakes and reduced the fluid flow to the remaining wheels, keeping me from stopping the car. The only thing that stopped my car was the one jammed wheel skidding on the ground.
So, does anyone know if the ABS system will continue to function after the engine stops running?
Is there any other logical reason that I could not stop the vehicle even though I was pressing the pedal to the floor as hard as I possibly could?