Vigo wrote:
I've experienced two scenarios where i essentially lost braking because an ABS channel was shared with 2 wheels. Once was going down a steep hill with a space saver spare on a front tire. That wheel locked up, it pulsed the channel that resulted in less braking to ANOTHER wheel, and i had only 2 brakes left to stop the vehicle on the steep hill, which barely worked.
Fronts are ALWAYS controlled separately. There is no such thing as a two-channel ABS on a passenger vehicle or light truck. a front/rear system can be either 3- or 4-channel. i believe all diagonal split systems are 4-channel. No matter whether it's a front/rear or a diagonal split foundation brake system, the outputs of the MC go into the ABS HCU. Inside the ABS HCU, each channel has it's own isolation and dump valves, with dedicated fluid paths to each wheel end brake.
What you experienced was a stack-up of (1) reduced grip on one front corner due to the space-saver, combined with (2) more front weight and (3) less rear weight due to heading down a steep hill. your situation reduced your rear vertical force, which limited how much braking the rears could do. your space-saver limited how much grip you had on that front corner. End result is reduced braking, for sure, but can't be blamed on the ABS.
Vigo wrote:
The other scenario was that i was braking while changing lanes into a turn lane to make a left turn at speed (no oncoming traffic). My left front tire ran over a piece of sheet metal (flashing or ducting of some sort), and the tire grabbed it and slid it down the road. So the abs system sees that wheel as fully locked and pulses braking in that circuit. So now i have inadequate braking AND horrendous understeer to get out of a turn into oncoming lanes that i'm already sort of committed to. I slid totally past the intersection and partially into an oncoming lane and had to pull a U-turn and go back to the intersection i missed.
In both cases i essentially 'lost braking' to a dangerous degree because the ABS was not a 4-channel system. Both cases COULD have resulted in accidents if i'd been unlucky. In both cases, my opinion is that it would have been entirely the fault of the ABS system.
on the second one, and on your conclusion, i'd have to say your opinion is berkeleyed. how is it entirely the fault of the ABS that there was a piece of sheetmetal laying in the road, that you ran over it, that it stuck to your tire, and that you were going too fast to recover? if the sheetmetal truly stuck to your tread and was between your tire and the road, then you're dealing with the friction coefficient of sheetmetal to road, not tire to sheetmetal and not tire to road.
and let's think about the effect of reduced brake force on a single front tire. reducing the longitudinal (braking) demand on a tire increases that tire's lateral force capability. So, by dumping pressure to a front tire in a turning maneuver, the front lateral force capability goes up! So in the scenario as you describe it, the ABS actually gave you more front turning grip. perhaps not enough to allow you to negotiate the radius you desired, on the surface you found yourself, at the speed with which you entered the maneuver, or with the amount of steering you dialed in.
remember that "A lat equals V squared over R", which means the amount of lat accel you're requesting is equal to the square of the speed you're traveling, divided by the radius of the path.
also remember that "A max equals mu peak", which means that the maximum acceleration (in any direction) that a tire can generate, is equal to the peak of the mu-slip curve of that tire on that surface.
so, if you're going in too fast for that radius on that surface, you saturate the tires and your vehicle seeks a larger radius, ie you go off the outside.
sorry man, but the ABS is not to blame in either of your scenarios.