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-   -   Avis and a car with no brake! (https://www.fodors.com/community/europe/avis-and-a-car-with-no-brake-358339/)

DeborahAnn May 12th, 2008 07:08 AM

this is a timely post, my husband and I are renting a car this Wed.with Avis at Madrid airport through Autoeurope. I expect it will be a Renault manual.

I'll make sure I look for the parking brake when I get into the car. Ron will be looking for the usual, any outside damage to the car, how the lights and wipers work. I don't think the parking brake has ever been an issue for us, but I'll be checking on it this time. We'll be taveling in and out of the Pyrenees for two weeks so I'm sure we'll be using the brake often.

thanks for the warning,
Deborah

clarasong May 12th, 2008 07:45 AM

rkkwan: funny you should mention the Audi...I had a lovely A6 for awhile and was totally in love with it, drove like a dream, fine finish in and out, sound system was awesome, etc. , but I had nothing but trouble with it, expensive trouble, and all before I had even got to 40,000 miles. Finally, when the water hose broke, I traded it in for a Japanese make, which runs like a top, very reliable.

My opinion is that some of the high end (Audi, BMW, Rover,) European cars, while being good while they are good, are really bad when they go bad. Just my experience.

Some of the mountain roads around the Douro Valley in Portugal are incredible for their steepness, lack of guard rails, lack of 'turn around' options, etc., and if you meet a car coming down while going up, one of you must yield by backing down the mountain. (I was born in the mountains of the West, but never really saw any like this). It's no time to try to get familiar with the attributes of a hidden parking brake that may or may not engage when you need it. (Wasn't it Grace Kelly who went off into the mts. below when she failed to negotiate a turn on the steep slopes of sounthern France.?)

Anyway, I sure miss my Acura when I am driving in Europe...wonder what the price of "petrol" is there....anyone care to venture a guess?????

rkkwan May 12th, 2008 08:05 AM

Well, driving an unfamiliar rental is always a problem. But I think at the least this thread would be helpful for those who rent car in Europe. Figure out the parking brakes, where is Reverse and how to get into it, etc, before starting on your drive.

GSteed May 12th, 2008 08:21 AM

Operating systems vary! That said, I now spend 15 minutes in the rental yard learning how to operate our rental. When possible we get an extra key. I have also had duplicate keys made. I like to check the driving lamps and windshield washers. I always ascertain where the fuel filler nozzle is. Sometimes it pays to do a survey of the car for nicks and such. We have learned to drop luggage at the gate and then return the car!

rkkwan May 12th, 2008 08:38 AM

Extra key?

The Renaults I've got with the automatic parking brake also use a card which you put in a slot to start the car, not a traditional key. :D

clarasong May 12th, 2008 06:00 PM

Common, quick, what other kind of cars can we find in Lisbon besides a Renault? I'll cancel the trip before I'll drive another piece of junk like we had before.??? What are the best cars in Europe??

janisj May 12th, 2008 08:57 PM

clarasong: You'll really have to get over this. Even IF you book a different type of car, it does not mean you will get that type of car. The rental agencies will say &quot;Fiat Punto <i>or similar</i>&quot; or &quot;Volkswagen Golf or similar&quot;.

They do not promise you a specific car.

Cowboy1968 May 12th, 2008 09:55 PM

I don't really get the problem:
The electronic handbrake is a safety and a convenience feature.
Besides the auto-lock function when you turn off the engine, it has been developed to help drivers to start the car on an incline.

When you have to stop on an incline, push the button, and then forget about the brake. It has an auto-release function as rkkwan described. The sensors will disengage the brake by the level of traction and foreward movement of the car. If the car starts to roll back, the brake will engage again automatically to stop it in an instant.

walkinaround May 12th, 2008 10:13 PM

&gt;&gt;&gt;&gt;&gt;&gt;
parking brake pedal...I'm not sure if I've ever seen one in a stick shift car but it wouldn't surprise me. And it wouldn't be a concern.
&gt;&gt;&gt;&gt;&gt;&gt;

i WOULD be surprised. at least here in the uk, people are taught to actively use the HAND brake on hills. you may not pass your road test if you don't. considering how actively used this brake is in manual transmission cars, it is not a good idea to mess with the design.

logos999 May 13th, 2008 07:50 AM

RTFM !

J62 May 13th, 2008 07:57 AM

or LLFM if it's a french car

rkkwan May 13th, 2008 08:03 AM

Back to the issue of American cars with manual and the parking brake pedal... Of course, it's an issue and a safety hazard. But yes, I've seen it, like I said, on a late 80's car, most likely a K-Car or Sundance/Shadow.

It's not an issue now, as most American cars don't even offer manual transmission, and fewer and fewer cars use the bench seats.

The issue arises when you have bench seats and manual. The way to do it is to have the parking brake as a pull-push handle coming out from under the dash. Not as a pedal for the left foot.

logos999 May 13th, 2008 08:19 AM

&gt;LLFM
I think the word pu*ain should be inserted :D. The result being LLPM.

november_moon Jul 31st, 2008 05:15 PM

My '57 GMC pick-up is a manual with a parking brake peddle :)

Actually, come to think of it, our Chevy S-10 Blazer was like that too.

I never mistook the brake for the clutch though.

Momliz Jul 31st, 2008 06:36 PM

well, if you are going to say LLPM, wouldn't you say LLP <i>de</i> M?

nona1 Jul 31st, 2008 10:59 PM

Renaults are great. I've had them for years.

Clarasong - why can't you just admit you were wrong and there wasn't actually anything wrong with your car? It had a brake. A brake that works. Why make silly cmments like not wanting a brake that may or may not work. You just didn't know how to use it. OK, you'd prefer a hand-lver type brake. That'a fine. It doesn't make other designs of cars 'a piece of shit'. Why slag off an entire manufacturer because you didn't find out how to drive the car you hired?

We all make mistakes. It's the continuing to bluster that makes you look a bit silly.

clarasong Aug 1st, 2008 07:47 PM

nona dear: when you are on a very steep hill, and must pull over and stop to let someone coming the other way to pass (only room for one car), then you want to know that when you put the gear in low (first) and slip the clutch, that it won't roll backwards over the steep incline...a hand brake is so much more reasuring than something that is 'supposed' to engage. I, for one, don't intend to trust it.

Yes the cars we rent are all manual shift, and I am very comfortable with them, prefer them actually, and yes, we are taught (as in England) to use the parking brake for added safety...so I will not accept, in future, a car that has any thing other than this. End of story.

janisj Aug 1st, 2008 08:12 PM

&quot;<i> . . . . that it won't roll backwards over the steep incline...a hand brake is so much more reasuring than something that is 'supposed' to engage.</i>&quot;

Just because you are reassured by having a hand brake - that does not make it a more secure brake.

clarasong Aug 3rd, 2008 08:48 PM


nona dear: RX: just take one aspirin, (maybe with a shot of gin) and call me in the morning.

And there'll be no charge.

nona1 Aug 4th, 2008 12:22 AM

Me? Why?

Clara dear: Maybe you should get some glasses and then you'd be able to find the brake button in your car?


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