Submitted by navenarf t3_11da1qa in explainlikeimfive
I recently went into a debate about the fastest way to stop a car (with a manual gearbox), in an emergency situation. Is simply hitting the brake as fast, as hard as possible, assuming ABS is doing its job, the fastest way to slow down a car? Or will the car slow down faster in combination with rev matching and engine braking?
My thought is most modern vehicle have efficient brakes and that its braking force will simply override the braking force from engine braking, how does it work mathematically?
bbqroast t1_ja7ealf wrote
Hypothetically yes, engine breaking might* give you a small amount of additional breaking force.
In practicality you should focus only on slamming down the breaks as far as they'll ago (assuming you're driving a vaguely modern car). Fyi the breaks on a car go a lot further than most people ever try.
*Might not because the limiting factor could be how much traction your wheels get, at which point adding additional breaking via the engine won't help.