thanks mate, crystal clear nowbeinthemud wrote:scuba steve 22 wrote:![]()
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(sarcasm)
i ticked auto too. not that i drive anything special, i just like the control at low speeds
cheers steve[/quote
Thanks Scuba
Here you go macca![]()
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Gee, you really can't get much right, can you? Three cars, three manuals.rogerworkman wrote:u must drive a auto
Last weekend I got to drive a new td Auto Mitsubishi Challenger along a couple of tracks in the Victoria High Country.
I had some doubts about how it would go for engine braking, and discovered it was better than I expected - about what my manual petrol shorty was like before the crawler gears.
Another member on the trip had a td auto Paj with crawler gears, and, in low 1st, he was applying throttle down some hills - as I was in my shorty with crawlers.
Engine braking was the last question mark I had about autos off-road. Not any more. I'll be looking for a diesel auto for my next 4wd.
rogerworkman wrote:u must drive a auto
And the supporting evidence is oops none there.rogerworkman wrote:autos are for amuptees and people who carnt drive
Been in an auto with crawler gears?Struth wrote:I drove a track last week that I simply would not even think about doing in an auto, gravel surface, rutted and very very steep descent, low 1st was too fast for it and I had to apply brakes regularly on the way down.
Cheers
Gwagensteve wrote:Been in an auto with crawler gears? NoStruth wrote:I drove a track last week that I simply would not even think about doing in an auto, gravel surface, rutted and very very steep descent, low 1st was too fast for it and I had to apply brakes regularly on the way down.
Cheers
I've driven a 4 speed auto vitara with 4:1 gears in the transfer (otherwise stock) and 31" tyres and low 1st was too low for most descents - it was so slow it was boring. That was with no fancy lockup switches on the converter, and with tyres 20% taller than stock. Honestly - the owner almost never used low 1st for descents. With gearing, there's so much drag in the converter with the engine at idle they engine brake like a fiend.
If you were applying the brakes in a manual to control speed then you might as well be in an auto- it would make no difference.
I disagree, I could come off the brakes in the manual and let the gearing do the work, application of the brakes was to slow down occasionaly to a safe crawl speed, then apply again as the crawl speed slowly increased.
An interesting note is that as suzuki owners we stuff with gearing all the time - there's barely a car in our club with standard gearing. Getting the gearing right for your use and tyre size is important with an auto or a manual, however, to approach the drivability of an auto with a manual you need twice the numerical reduction, which might not be practical.
Agree, we all run 4:88s to make 35s more driveable, it is a good gear ratio for most work we do. On this particular descent one member had both transfers engaged to slow the vehicle to a comfortable speed. Like really low gearing, not practical for everyone.
Steve.
macca81 wrote:beinthemud wrote:thanks mate, crystal clear nowscuba steve 22 wrote:![]()
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(sarcasm)
i ticked auto too. not that i drive anything special, i just like the control at low speeds
cheers steve[/quote
Thanks Scuba
Here you go macca![]()
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its true, 2 years ago i would never have imagined ever wanting an auto for ANYTHING! i loved driving a manual onroad, and i loved being able to stick my patrol in gear and put the hand throttle on and just drive, knowing that i could choose what gear i needed. loved idling down hills knowing it wouldnt run away on me too.beinthemud wrote:
Great to see your Passion for Autos macca [nosarcasm]
I have this problem with the 545RFE chrysler 5spd in the JK. The auto is 100% convinced the motor has no power (which is untrue, 130kw and 460NM with the bulk of it available from 1800rpm) and is constantly shifting. Squeezing the throttle should have it surge forward but instead it flicks down a ratio or two and revs harder actually making it go slower. It makes no sense.Gwagensteve wrote:I disagree raptorthumper. IMHO in a properly geared and appropriately powerful 4WD, a 6 speed auto is an unnecessary complication.
I'm talking enthusiast use here, not new-car-owner malling.
6 speed autos typically have a double overdrive to allow VERY low rev cruising for emissions. They often have a low first gear too, but that is for emissions too in a funny sort of way - it means acceptable acceleration off the line with small throttle openings. In case anyone was wondering, 99% of the new technology in cars these days is there to lower emissions.
I've driven BM's with 5 speed autos and my Dad's Touareg has a 6 speed auto. It's a massive PITA. It has 400Nm, but the auto is convinced the motor has 1/2 that so it's forever shuffling up and down through eleventy gears on a winding road. Funnily enough, put it is S mode (sport) and it will never engage 6th. As it's rarely in first either because it's uber low.... all of a sudden, the car is only effective in 4 gears.
BM's are the same, you never know what freakin gear it's in and it's always all over the place, shifting about twice as often as you would in a manual - they never let the motor sit into it's torque and pull - again, all in the name of emissions. that's because the shift strategies try to lock the converter as quickly as possible in every gear for maximum efficiency. Once the converter is locked, you get none of the torque multiplication of an auto, only the HP loss, and from an enthusiast perspective, (and especially offroad) that's dumb.
The whole idea of autos is that the converter makes each gear flexible by a ratio of around 2:1, a 4 speed auto has a huge range of possible gearing ratios to choose from from maximum slip (with maximum torque multiplication) to locked in each gear ( no torque multiplication) , and that's why you don't need as many ratios.
Apparently the 8 speed auto in the lexus is just ridiculous. in the IS-F it has about 4 ratios too many based on the reviews I've read.
Steve.
Had a VW Golf GTI with DSG (6spd wet pack clutch)Gwagensteve wrote:Auto's don't win many of which races? Manuals don't win many races either considering that most race cars now run sequential/paddle boxes that allow shifting without clutching.
I find automatics frustrating to drive on road - I've only had one auto road car (a Range rover) but I'm quite keen to own a DSG car, mostly because of the ability to fit in more shifts on challenging roads - as it is, on the roads I drive, my speed over the ground is limited by when I can fit in gearchanges.
The flexibility of each gear that is such a boon off road I find annoying on road - it mutes throttle response.
Steve.
what?? can you explain this analogy a bit for me please?TroopiePete wrote:much like Air Bags in a 4x4 - bad idea in my books,
Last thing I want happening when banging along a hard track is the darn thing to go off in my face!
Not that I have ever been told of it happening it's just I don't trust exploding things that much!
Nup, it'd be terrible unless you had manual over ride for the clutch control.Gwagensteve wrote:We tossed up between an R32 DSG Golf and the STi. The DSG was awesome, but the STi won out due to the lack of electronics controlling everything - we came from a very buggy Mini Cooper S, so we were scarred.
I don't believe DSG is suitable for off road use. It's hard enough modulating a converter off road, and that's a "passive" device. trying to drive through the clutch when the computer thinks you are trying to do something else would be impossible.
Steve.
Sport mode in the petrol turbo GTI is unusable...hitting a man hole cover would bump my foot enough to depress the accelerator just enough to send the bloody thing into warp drive. I called it silly mode as it was only useful on a race track. I think i used it maybe 6 times in the 12 months I had the car.LOCKEE wrote:Just bought the wife a dsg VW Jetta TDi to replace a V8 Discovery Auto as the family run around. Didn't need 4 4WD wagons.
Awesome gearbox. Sports mode is all you need. Full manual is redundant in a road diesel.
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