Why? You mind as well not put on the brake at all since the stress is still on the parking pawl. You should do as I suggested which is apply foot brake, apply parking brake, release foot brake, shift into park. This is the only way to ensure that the parking brake is actually doing its job.What I do -
1. Put on the hydraulic brake
2. Shift to park
3. Apply parking brake
4. Release hydraulic brake
Why? You mind as well not put on the brake at all since the stress is still on the parking pawl. You should do as I suggested which is apply foot brake, apply parking brake, release foot brake, shift into park. This is the only way to ensure that the parking brake is actually doing its job.
If anyone needs to read again, it is you.:hmm:
Read again.
What I do -
1. Put on the hydraulic brake
That's foot brake, no issue here
2. Shift to park
This should be done last! Since it's done first, when everything is said and done, it will be resting on this parking pawl and not on the parking brake
3. Apply parking brake
Too late now as the parking brake won't be allowed to "grab" due to the shifting into park in step 2
4. Release hydraulic brake
everything comes together and you'll feel the car resting not on the parking brake but the parking pawl itself.
If anyone needs to read again, it is you.
I didn't misread anything at all.
I've never even heard of one breaking - granted I haven't specifically looked for a case, but still. We haven't even broken one in a cruiser yet!![]()
Are you on a steep incline when you're doing this? I park most of my vehicles on an incline of varying degrees so I really notice when and how the parking brake is engaged.Maybe it's just my cars, but when I put the parking brake on, it's on. They also don't move when I still have my foot on the brake.
You should really be releasing the brake before putting the car into park because that's the only way to ensure that the parking brake has grabbed. Also if the parking brake ALONE is incapable of holding the vehicle on the hill, then it's either broken or you haven't put enough force onto the parking brake mechanism and therefore it's mostly useless since you're still relying on the transmission to keep the vehicle parked. I've parked on steep hills and if the parking brake isn't able to hold the vehicle on the hill on the first try, I then reapply the brake until it does.I've found that the parking/hand brake isn't strong enough to hold the car on its own on a hill, so I do that plus the transmission pawl.
Are you on a steep incline when you're doing this? I park most of my vehicles on an incline of varying degrees so I really notice when and how the parking brake is engaged.
You should really be releasing the brake before putting the car into park because that's the only way to ensure that the parking brake has grabbed. Also if the parking brake ALONE is incapable of holding the vehicle on the hill, then it's either broken or you haven't put enough force onto the parking brake mechanism and therefore it's mostly useless since you're still relying on the transmission to keep the vehicle parked. I've parked on steep hills and if the parking brake isn't able to hold the vehicle on the hill on the first try, I then reapply the brake until it does.
Why? You mind as well not put on the brake at all since the stress is still on the parking pawl. You should do as I suggested which is apply foot brake, apply parking brake, release foot brake, shift into park. This is the only way to ensure that the parking brake is actually doing its job.