I am not sure what you mean by "dynamic braking." Here's what "B" does and when to use it: Cars with transmissions always have a way to use the ENGINE to slow the car, for when you do not want to use the friction brakes. "Jake brakes" on an 18-wheeler, low gear on a manual or an automatic. This is useful for steep hills where the friction brakes would overheat. The Prius is different: Wen you step on the brake pedal the Prius uses MG2 as a generator to slow the car (unless you are going slower than 8 mph or step hard enough on the brake pedal to indicate an emergency stop; in both cases the friction brakes are used). Thus in the Prius, stepping on the brakes normally re-charges the battery. This is good. It re-captures energy. The exception to the above rule is if the battery is as full as the car's computer wants it to be. Then the friction brakes are used. This typically happens on a long downhill slope. When you are going downhill AND you see all 8 battery bars green, THEN AND ONLY THEN should you use "B" in order to reduce the amount of usage of the friction brakes, and avoid overheating them. "B" on the Prius stands for engine Braking: It uses the engine to help slow the car, just as first gear in a manual transmission car does. NEVER use "B" except as above. It is amazing and depressing how many wrong and downright stupid explanations some salesmen will give for "B." Many salesmen are hired off the street on a commission basis, and (unlike service people) the dealership may have no incentive to teach them anything about the cars they are selling, especially the unusual Prius.
My quick answer: I don't use "B" until my battery goes green on my MFD, and then only if I'm going down a steep hill. Harry
<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(Spike Jones @ Nov 4 2007, 09:16 AM) [snapback]534599[/snapback]</div> Yes. For one thing, it's easier than hitting the brake pedal. We regularly drive mountain highways in California, and the "B" gear not only recharges the battery, it's kind to our brake pads. We got in the habit of doing this from our old Ford van, that had an Overdrive button on the gear shift. We punched "OD off" going down steep hills, and it did the same thing as the Prius, without the bonus of capturing that power in the battery.
I never use B. I don't have long downhill stretches on a steep grade. You might want to read the manual about use of the B mode.
<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(Spike Jones @ Nov 4 2007, 11:16 AM) [snapback]534599[/snapback]</div> Hi Spike, There is no "Dynamic" braking on the Prius, as there is no giant resistor with liquid flowing through the radiator to get rid of the heat. Might be a neat retrofit project though. Could extend mountain driving friction brake life. With the resistor plumbed into the engine coolant system, it would keep the engine warm for instant hybrid capability at the bottom of the hill. The system would need to watch the CAN bus to get the battery SOC. When a switch on the instrument panel is switched to "Mountain Braking" mode, the following action would take place. When the battery is charged to the appropriat SOC (first green bar?) it switches in the resistor. Something more sophisticated might use the engine temp and gas pedal/brake pedal positions. What B mode does is uses closed throttle engine drag to aid down-hill braking.
<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(MO51 @ Nov 4 2007, 09:54 PM) [snapback]534667[/snapback]</div> I may be misinterpreting your post, but going downhill in B mode will not generate more electricity than just coasting down the hill in D mode. The B mode runs the engine to slow down the car, not increase the regeneration. So you are wasting the energy unless the battery is full. As long as the battery has some spare capacity, braking will capture the energy while B mode will throw it away. When the battery is full, energy must be wasted anyway, and B mode will not wear the brake pads, while braking will. -Stein
Using B except when decending a hill which will overcharge the battery is like spilling petrol on the road. If you lightly touch the brake pedal you will increase regenerative braking and capture energy to reuse when climbing the next hill. Using B mode dumps energy as heat to the atmosphere by spinning the internal combustion engine generating heat which is dumped through the exhaust and cooling system.
B-mode does generate more than just coasting in D---not a lot, but coasting is usually about 12-14 amps (highway speed) where B is closer to 20-24 amps.
<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(patsparks @ Nov 5 2007, 05:16 AM) [snapback]534866[/snapback]</div> Varies but goes up quite a bit pretty quickly. You can get up to about 100amps before the amount of brake pressure starts to increase to the point that you risk dropping out regen...I've seen 120+ amps at times though when applied smoothly on a smooth road (hitting bumps will also knock you out of regen).
<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(patsparks @ Nov 5 2007, 05:54 AM) [snapback]534871[/snapback]</div> Almost always, yes...depends how lightly, but it will almost always give you more.
Try it on a level road. Get your car up to speed limit. Set your display to regen. Keep your foot off the gas and brake pedal. shift into "B". You will immediately feed your car slow down. You will also see that the display shows the battery getting recharged. Dynamic brakes do not need resistors to do braking JUST a load like recharging the battery. Let you car continual to slow down. You will feel a more dramatic effect at slower speeds (Under 30mph) Then do it again but this time not go into "B" still not hitting the brake and feel the differance. Then again this time apply the brake pedal. feel the deceleration. At anytime, when your step (even lightly) on the brake pedal. You will feel the same deceleration effect. I am saying By using the "B" you will recharge your battery and save you brake lining. There is a draw back. Sometimes I forget to shift back into "D". I do not know it until I remove my foot from the gas pedal. Then I feel the deceleration. When I do use "B" I keep my hand in the shift level and immediately shift back to "D" when I do not need to decelerate anymore (complete stop or resume speed). Watching the REGEN display will not tell you, you are in "B". It looks the same as driving in "D".
Try it on a level road. Get your car up to speed limit. Set your display to regen. Keep your foot off the gas and brake pedal. shift into "B". You will immediately feed your car slow down. You will also see that the display shows the battery getting recharged. Dynamic brakes do not need resistors to do braking JUST a load like recharging the battery. Let you car continual to slow down. You will feel a more dramatic effect at slower speeds (Under 30mph) Then do it again but this time not go into "B" still not hitting the brake and feel the differance. Then again this time apply the brake pedal. feel the deceleration. At anytime, when your step (even lightly) on the brake pedal. You will feel the same deceleration effect. I am saying By using the "B" you will recharge your battery and save you brake lining. There is a draw back. Sometimes I forget to shift back into "D". I do not know it until I remove my foot from the gas pedal. Then I feel the deceleration. When I do use "B" I keep my hand in the shift level and immediately shift back to "D" when I do not need to decelerate anymore (complete stop or resume speed). Watching the REGEN display will not tell you, you are in "B". It looks the same as driving in "D".
<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(Spike Jones @ Nov 5 2007, 07:35 AM) [snapback]534926[/snapback]</div> Spike, your friction brakes are only used below 9MPH or in a panic stop. Using B in the manner you describe is a waste of time and effort.
After getting a $300 ticket, and then on another ocation a warning for going too fast in a school zone. I have deciede to use the "B" whenever I see a school zone so I will slow down faster after taking my foot off the gas. I get distracted watching for the kids and other cars that I don't watch the speedometer. Joe
Spike, you should really read Hobbit's B-mode write up (site is down at the moment, but here's the link: http://techno-fandom.org/~hobbit/cars/b-mode.html ) You're not saving your brakes by using B-mode...all braking is with MG2 (unless it kicks out due to bumps or very hard/fast emergency type braking). It forces the ICE to spin and does not allow you to go into stealth mode at low speeds, thus reducing fuel economy. There is not any benefit to using B-mode on any but very long downhill descents when the ICE will hit maximum SOC with manually braking...and even then the only benefit is less work with the brake pedal.