| It won’t happen on a real car because the speed probably comes from the ABS wheel speed sensors, and in that case they would read the correct speed of the wheels (unless the motor shaft is proper broken). If the ABS is properly plugged in it will detect a fault with the sensors (which probably causes the creep to stop) however it won’t detect a mechanical fault with the encoder wheel (such as sensor not bolted to wheel) — such a fault is indistinguishable from the wheel not spinning, thus zero speed. I think you were emulating the ABS module right? In that case, the spinning out of control is actually probably your fault. If you had not emulated this, the system would realise there is an ABS fault (from the messages not being present) and not use the ABS reported speed. It might even fall back to motor speed automatically. Re: shaft scenario, if the motor shaft is broken the safety risk is pretty minimal because the torque wont actually cause the car to move. I guess this is what they arrived to in the FMEA. |