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Stopping Distance, Reaction Distance and Braking Distance

The document explains the concepts of stopping distance, reaction distance, and braking distance in driving. It details how reaction distance is influenced by speed and reaction time, while braking distance is affected by speed, road conditions, and vehicle load. It also provides formulas for calculating both reaction and braking distances, culminating in a method to determine the total stopping distance.

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Ded Sy
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
125 views4 pages

Stopping Distance, Reaction Distance and Braking Distance

The document explains the concepts of stopping distance, reaction distance, and braking distance in driving. It details how reaction distance is influenced by speed and reaction time, while braking distance is affected by speed, road conditions, and vehicle load. It also provides formulas for calculating both reaction and braking distances, culminating in a method to determine the total stopping distance.

Uploaded by

Ded Sy
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Stopping distance, reaction distance and braking

distance

Stopping distance

Reaction
distance Braking distance

Hazard Braking The car comes


detected begins to a stop

Reaction distance

The reaction distance is the distance you travel from the point at which you detect a hazard until
you begin braking or swerving.

The reaction distance is affected by

The car’s speed (proportional increase):


2 x higher speed = 2 x longer reaction distance.

5 x higher speed = 5 x longer reaction distance.

Your reaction time.


Normally 0.5–2 seconds.

45–54-year-olds have the best reaction time in traffic.

The reaction distance can be decreased by

Anticipation of hazards.

Preparedness.

The reaction distance can be increased by

The necessity of decision-making (for example, deciding whether to brake or to steer away from
the hazard).
Alcohol, drugs and medication.

Tiredness.

Calculate the reaction distance

Easy method

Formula: Remove the last digit in the speed, multiply by the reaction time and then by 3.

Example of calculation with a speed of 50 km/h and a reaction time of 1 second:

50 km/h ⇒ 5
5 * 1 * 3 = 15 metres reaction distance

More precise method

Formula: d = (s * r) / 3.6

d = reaction distance in metres (to be calculated).


s = speed in km/h.
r = reaction time in seconds.
3.6 = fixed figure for converting km/h to m/s.

Example of calculation with a speed of 50 km/h and a reaction time of 1 second:

(50 * 1) / 3.6 = 13.9 metres reaction distance

Drive slowly or you might not even have time to react to oncoming traffic.

Braking distance

The braking distance is the distance the car travels from the point at which you begin braking until
the car has come to a standstill.

The braking distance is affected by

The vehicle’s speed (quadratic increase: “raised to the power of 2”):


2 x higher speed = 4 x longer braking distance.

3 x higher speed = 9 x longer braking distance.

The road (gradient and conditions).

The load.

The brakes (condition, braking technique and how many wheels are braking).

Calculate the braking distance

It is very difficult to achieve reliable calculations of the braking distance as road conditions and the
tyres’ grip can vary greatly. The braking distance may, for example, be 10 times longer when there
is ice on the road.

Easy method

Conditions: Good and dry road conditions, good tyres and good brakes.

Formula: Remove the zero from the speed, multiply the figure by itself and then multiply by 0.4.

The figure 0.4 is taken from the fact that the braking distance from 10 km/h in dry road
conditions is approximately 0.4 metres. This has been calculated by researchers measuring the
braking distance. Thus, in the simplified formula, we base our calculations on the braking
distance at 10 km/h and increase it quadratically with the increase in speed.

Example of calculation with a speed of 10 km/h:

10 km/h ⇒ 1
1*1=1
1 * 0.4 = 0.4 metres braking distance

Example of calculation with a speed of 50 km/h:

50 km/h ⇒ 5
5 * 5 = 25
25 * 0.4 = 10 metres braking distance

More precise method

Conditions: Good tyres and good brakes.

Formula: d = s2 / (250 * f)

d = braking distance in metres (to be calculated).


s = speed in km/h.
250 = fixed figure which is always used.
f = coefficient of friction, approx. 0.8 on dry asphalt and 0.1 on ice.

Example of calculation with a speed of 50 km/h on dry asphalt:

502 / (250 * 0.8) = 12.5 metres braking distance

Stopping distance

Stopping distance = reaction distance + braking distance

Calculate the stopping distance with the easy methods

It is summer and the road is dry. You are driving at 90 km/h in a car with good tyres
and brakes. You suddenly notice a hazard on the road and brake forcefully. How long
is the stopping distance if your reaction time is 1 second?

The stopping distance is the reaction distance + braking distance. First we calculate the reaction
distance:

90 km/h ⇒ 9

9 * 1 * 3 = 27 metres reaction distance

Then we calculate the braking distance:

90 km/h ⇒ 9

9 * 9 = 81

81 * 0.4 = 32 metres braking distance

Now both distances are combined:

27 + 32 = 59 metres stopping distance

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