I
doubt anyone should be pushing a Macan to the limit of decent all
weather tyres on a public road let alone summers in right conditions,
being concerned about a small difference in braking distance suggests
foccusing on a single figure out of context, you can normally get far
more safety by leaving a second extra gap and that adds the extra
advantage you are less likely to be hit from behind as you won't be
braking harder than the person behind can (yes I avoided hitting
something by quite a margin, car behind didn't though).
^This
You can disable all
the airbags also, because most Macan owners drive so slow and careful
that they won't be needed anyway...
Driving
slowly doesn't mean you are driving safely, driving safely
doesn't mean you have to drive slowly (unless circumstances dictate
you need to) - driving safely is about managing risks and you can go
fast and have an enjoyable drive without increasing risks
unduly,.
Unfortunately people don't know how to judge
risks and the factors very well - instead they generally focus on simple
things and do substitutions - e.g. they seen 80% shorter braking
distance and that sounds to them like 20% safer and who wouldn't
want to be safer, but it is far more complex than that.
Personally I hate
traffic, but even worse is being in a queue of cars with insufficient
braking distance between them - it raises stress and sucks all the
joy out of driving, so when in traffic I tend to just leave large
braking gap sit back and enjoy the music - give me an open road
with no/little traffic and you can enjoy the drive and the car and
there is less worry about things like ultimate stopping distance as
roads are clear.