groovemeister wrote:
I'm sorry but .... what's the point?
The old saying springs to mind: "If it ain't broke, don't fix it"
I was a passenger in one some while ago, and my first thought was "this is all very sexy stuff, but in 10 years time, when the car's done 100K, how much of this stuff is still going to work?
My 13 year old passat with 180k on it has an "old fashioned" handbrake and ... it works! It stops me rolling down hills and, when I release it, allows the car to move freely. Sorted.
It seems to me that these (french?) car makers are inventing stuff for the hell of it, when it actually isn't necessary.
Same applies to those pain-in-the-a$$ indicator switches being fitted to new(ish) vauxhalls. Completely threw me first time I drove one! Again, my old passat has a switch that goes clunk and it, like the handbrake, works!
I'm pretty torn, to be honest. It's certainly convenient, MOST of the time! I get to where I'm going, turn the engine off, and the handbrake applies itself. I drive off, it takes itself off. Hill starts are a breeze, AND I get a cubby box betwen the front seats big enough to put a small child in! In fact, it's only when I get back in my own (old) car or my wife's car that I realise how "convenient" it makes things! Of course, when I'm cursing and swearing with a flat battery in winter and I have to get the spanners out to release it before I can even bump start the car, I might think differently! When it's 10 years old and the warranty is a distant memory and I'm stood in the dealership saying "you want HOW much???!!!

" as I try to buy a replacement actuator, I probably won't think it's quite so "convenient"!
I think one reason manufacturers are going over to them is because it makes it easier to pass the braking test. You need to be able to stop on the hendbrake, at a certain rate, fully-loaded, without having to apply more than a certain force on the lever. As friction materials get harder and harder, that becomes quite difficult. With a leccy handbrake, you only need your little finger. I suspect there are also benefits to the electronic stability control system if the "computer" can over-ride (or apply) it at will.