Then I guess you´re thinking about 70´s cars, while I was thinking about 2000 cars, or at least that was my comparison when I said modern cars have no engine braking compared to old onesJust_a_fan wrote: ↑28 Apr 2020, 13:39Modern cars will have only 60% of the drag of old cars. That's a big difference.Andres125sx wrote: ↑28 Apr 2020, 11:38
I'm aware about drag, but drag difference is not that high between modern and old cars and engine braking difference is very noticeable even at 50kmh when drag is negligible
Edit: I have even test hitting the clutch to stop any engine braking, over 80-90km/h drag is more noticeable than engine braking, also due to the longer gear I guess, but under 60-70km/h drag is negligible. Even mechanical drag is higher (deceleration is quite constant up to still). But engine braking is very high at low speed. You can test it yourself as I´ve done, try flooring the clutch while on flat terrain to see how strong is drag deceleration, then release the clutch again and you´ll learn how much engine braking your car really has. Not sure about other cars but I´ve compared a 2010 bmw with a 2000 megane and difference was massive, simply impossible to not notice it