http://www.fordvehicles.com/suvs/explorer/2011/?searchid=444987|32151776|210468471&ef_id=57RM2 152 ft
ABS stands for Automatic Braking System. The ABS light in a 1997 Ford Explorer will come on when this braking system is activated.
It may be because you are braking.
Check bulbs
Braking distance refers to the distance a vehicle will travel from the point when its brakes are fully applied to when it comes to a complete stop.
Get your Anti-Lock Braking system diagnosed and repaired by a qualified professional. Then the light will turn itself off.
On dry, level pavement, with decent tires? About 120 feet. Many things affect this calculation. With worn tires the distance can increase to 210 feet. Dirt roads require longer braking distances than pavement. Ice can increase the braking distance by hundreds of feet. Braking down a hill, depending upon the slope, can double the braking distance, whereas braking up hill can halve that distance. If you lock the tires, you typically increase the braking distance. You can reduce the distance by pumping the brakes. Anti-lock brakes allow the tires to slip, which decreases the braking distance. Extra weight in the vehicle increases the braking distance. Refer to the link below for calculating the braking distance at different speeds with different tire wear on dry, level pavement.
No, the door on a 1998 Ford Explorer will not fit a 1992 Ford Explorer.
Check the fuel pump?
Braking distance
Braking in a moving vehicle is applying the brakes to slow or halt movement, usually by depressing a pedal. The braking distance is the distance between the time the brakes are applied and the time the vehicle comes to a complete stop.
in rain, snow or ice your tires have much less traction, and therefore need more braking distance.
Decrease ..