1) What braking acceleration means
Braking acceleration is how fast speed drops during braking. It is typically negative. This tool also shows the deceleration magnitude |a|. Speeds are converted accurately to m/s internally, then you can display results in m/s², ft/s², or g.
2) Time-based calculation
When braking time is known, the calculator uses a = (vf − vi) / t. Example: 100 km/h to 0 km/h in 5.0 s gives a ≈ −5.556 m/s². Use this when timing is reliable, such as video frames or instrumented tests.
3) Distance-based calculation
If braking distance is known, it uses a = (vf² − vi²) / (2d). Example: 50 km/h to 0 km/h over 24.8 m gives a ≈ −3.968 m/s². This is useful with GPS distance or marked braking zones.
4) g-force for quick comparison
g-force is |a| / g with g = 9.80665 m/s². Everyday firm braking often falls near 0.3–0.6 g. The example emergency stop row reaches about 0.67 g, which feels abrupt and needs good grip.
5) Stopping distance with reaction time
For vf = 0, braking distance is vi² / (2|a|). Reaction distance is vi·reaction. With vi = 60 km/h (16.67 m/s) and reaction = 1.2 s, reaction distance is about 20.0 m, then braking distance is added for total stopping distance.
6) Road grade and traction demand
Grade changes required tire force. Using a small-angle approximation, the calculator estimates μ ≈ |a + g·grade| / g where grade is percent. A −6% downhill increases traction demand, while a +5% uphill reduces it for the same measured deceleration.
7) Force, energy, and power
With mass, braking force is F = m·a. For a 1500 kg car at −5.556 m/s², F ≈ −8334 N. Removed kinetic energy is ½m(vi² − vf²). If time is provided, average braking power is energy divided by time.