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18 votes
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The right route to US rail decarbonization is electrification
16 votes -
India’s water transport workers' union says won’t help ships carrying arms bound for Israel
14 votes -
Air Canada successfully sued after its AI chatbot gave BC passenger incorrect information: airline claimed it wasn't liable for what its own AI told customers
96 votes -
Air Force OKs autonomous cargo flights across California after successful test
20 votes -
Ethiopia becomes the first country to ban (importation of) internal combustion vehicles
27 votes -
Waymo driverless car set on fire, destroyed by San Francisco crowd
43 votes -
Canada declares Flipper Zero public enemy No. 1 in car-theft crackdown
27 votes -
Finnair is now weighing passengers to update weight and balance calculations – identity of the volunteers remains anonymous
25 votes -
The small Norwegian city of Bergen has a competent light rail system – let's take a look at the Bybanen in depth
5 votes -
When US railroad workers get hurt on the job, some supervisors go to extremes to keep it quiet
29 votes -
More lanes are (still) a bad thing
32 votes -
US rail safety legislation still stalled one year after East Palestine Ohio disaster
36 votes -
Blood, guns, and broken scooters: Inside the chaotic rise and fall of Bird
15 votes -
Pace of electric car adoption has markedly slowed in the US
39 votes -
Tests show that guardrails possibly do little to stop EVs and other heavier vehicles. And US transportation officials are concerned.
16 votes -
Security crises from Red Sea to Black Sea pose a troubling question: How much has freedom of navigation been an anomaly?
4 votes -
A cycle of misery: The business of building commercial aircraft
6 votes -
Boeing wants US Federal Aviation Administration to exempt MAX 7 from safety rules to get it in the air
103 votes -
Greta Thunberg marched with activists to protest against Farnborough Airport expansion, which mainly serves private jets – planned increase from 50,000 to 70,000 flights per year
20 votes -
Boeing whistleblower: production line has “enormous volume of defects” bolts on MAX 9 weren’t installed
74 votes -
Russian who boarded flight from Copenhagen to Los Angeles last November without ticket, passport or visa has been found guilty of being a stowaway
20 votes -
Russia State Duma to prepare statement to US Congress and German parliament regarding Belgorod plane crash
17 votes -
Higher vehicle hoods significantly increase pedestrian deaths, US study finds
33 votes -
How nuclear weapons and nuclear materials are transported
7 votes -
Why the hovercraft's time might have finally arrived
16 votes -
Electric vehicles: can 'lightweighting' combat range anxiety?
24 votes -
New York City finishes protected bus lane designs in downtown Brooklyn
13 votes -
US judge blocks JetBlue-Spirit merger after DOJ’s antitrust challenge
12 votes -
Verge TS Ultra - The hubless electric motorcycle with sci-fi style and a great name
20 votes -
Hyundai unveils ’crab-walking” car that makes parallel parking a snap
16 votes -
Humorous messages on electronic signs discouraged by new guidelines from US Federal Highway Administration
33 votes -
Why autonomous trucking is harder than autonomous rideshare
12 votes -
‘This has been going on for years.’ Inside Boeing’s manufacturing mess.
28 votes -
We might need to say goodbye to the global ‘conveyor belt’ based on free passage through peaceful waters
24 votes -
Saving the drought stricken Panama Canal will take years and cost billions, if it’s even possible
11 votes -
Hertz is selling 20,000 electric vehicles to buy gasoline cars instead
26 votes -
Red Sea attacks halt Tesla production at German plant
10 votes -
Joe Biden administration announces $1 billion for low-emission US school buses
39 votes -
Oblique wing aircraft - Could this change air travel forever?
12 votes -
Planes collide and catch fire at Japan’s busy Haneda airport, killing five. Hundreds evacuated safely.
26 votes -
The fascinating engineering behind electric trains
17 votes -
Legislators in Kentucky and other fossil states charge EV drivers more than double in taxes than internal combustion engine drivers
41 votes -
Is it realistic to operate a fleet of electric buses in countries like Norway? Tackling challenges with the range of buses being shorter in cold weather.
8 votes -
The West vs Asia: what drivers are taught about motorcycle brakes
I've studied for motorcycle driving licenses in both my home country in Europe, and my work country in Asia. Something that really stood out to me was what each country said about braking. This...
I've studied for motorcycle driving licenses in both my home country in Europe, and my work country in Asia. Something that really stood out to me was what each country said about braking. This wasn't just advice or anecdotes, it appeared on each formal theory test.
Europe: Front brakes are the strongest, they are your go-to in an emergency. Use front brakes to stop, and rear brakes to slow gently.
- https://bikesaint.com/blogs/motorcycle-safety/braking-on-a-motorcycle
- https://www.cycletrader.com/blog/2023/05/15/when-should-i-use-the-front-rear-brakes-on-a-motorcycle/
Asia: Rear brakes are the strongest, front brakes are deliberately weaker. This is because braking too hard on the front is very dangerous, you'll catapult yourself over the handlebars as the rear half of the bike still has momentum.
Direct translation of exam question:
Which of the following is wrong about using a motorcycle brake?
A use both front And rear brakes
B Front wheel brake first
C rear wheel brake first
D Do not use the front brake too early
Answer B
Look at the problem, to choose " wrong approach ", of course, is to choose " first use the front wheel brake ". The car is moving forward, then the use of front wheel brake, in the role of inertia, easy to cause rollover, we should pay attention to safety!
I guess my overall question is, what are the underlying approaches to brake engineering here? Are either of them 'more correct' or is it a case of different priorities at play?
26 votes -
2024 is poised to be Puget Sound’s biggest transit year in decades
27 votes -
Daihatsu, Japanese automaker owned by Toyota, halts domestic production after admitting it forged results of safety tests for more than thirty years
33 votes -
How Tesla, BMW, Ford, GM and Mercedes driver assist systems compare
12 votes -
US study finds that Tesla drivers had highest accident rate, BMW drivers highest DUI rate
35 votes -
The super-secure delivery service that only diplomats can use
13 votes