Cerpin Taxt
Lifer
There's no fscking way that plane is gonna take off.
Originally posted by: Mucho
On Automatic Transmission do you save gas shifting to neutral at stop signs?
Originally posted by: Matthias99
Shifting to 'netural' in any AT-equipped car I've driven definitely disengages the transmission and results in lower RPMs (which should use less gas).
The first part of your post is what I was alluding to in my post.Originally posted by: Mark R
Originally posted by: Mucho
On Automatic Transmission do you save gas shifting to neutral at stop signs?
Yes. Although it isn't very much.
When you are stopped in drive, the engine is straining against the torque converter which is stalled. As a result the ECU will boost the fuel to the engine in order to stop the engine from stalling. Even older carburettered cars would sometimes select a higher idle jet when in drive to prevent stalling.
That said, other carburettered cars would do the opposite - they would have no compensation for being in drive. They would idle high in neutral when there was no load, but idle correctly in drive. In this case, they'd probably use more fuel while in neutral.
Of course, when the torque converter is stalled at idle speed, it doesn't present much of a load - but it probably saps about 1-2 hp.
When you are in neutral, the transmission is disconnected from the torque converter, and the torque converter can spin freely, providing no load to the engine. This means the engine can run with minimum fuel consumption.
That said, you also put extra wear on the transmission by repeatedly switching from neutral to drive. While stopped in drive, the whole transmission is stalled - nothing moves. In neutral, all the planet gear sets spin freely, which means the input gears spin at the speed of the engine and torque converter. When you select drive again, the brakes in the transmission have to bring those gear sets to a stop before the gear is selected - repeatedly switching requires repeated braking of the gears - which causes the brake bands in the transmission to wear out.
Bingo.Originally posted by: SampSon
Seems like too much work and too much worrying over something that really isn't a big problem. I've braked hard countless number of times while driving and my rotors have all had long service lives. I doubt that the lack of having your brake pads applied to the rotor after a hard stop will affect the rotors enough to warrant not applying the brakes.Originally posted by: Canai
Yes, if it is at a big incline, it goes into park. Or I just stop far enough back so that I can roll in neutral for the whole light.Originally posted by: SampSon
And what if he needs to use his brakes to keep his car from rolling?Originally posted by: tidehigh
cmon guys...
brake rotors get hot. hot metal warps. if he heats his brake rotors a ton in a bigtime stop. he puts it in neutral so he doesnt have to keep the brake pressed upon the rotor in one spot for the amount of time that he's sitting idle anyway.
still dont get it? i dont care 😛
Park would be a better option if he REALLY needed to cool his rotors down.
Originally posted by: tidehigh
cmon guys...
brake rotors get hot. hot metal warps. if he heats his brake rotors a ton in a bigtime stop. he puts it in neutral so he doesnt have to keep the brake pressed upon the rotor in one spot for the amount of time that he's sitting idle anyway.
still dont get it? i dont care 😛
Originally posted by: Quintox
What about coasting?
Originally posted by: Raduque
Originally posted by: Matthias99
Shifting to 'netural' in any AT-equipped car I've driven definitely disengages the transmission and results in lower RPMs (which should use less gas).
Uh... what? My truck idles at ~600rpm in gear... in Neutral or Park, it idles at 900rpm. Shifting to neutral doesn't save gas.
Originally posted by: mb
Originally posted by: Quintox
What about coasting?
NO.
Whenever you are driving on public roads, you should always be in gear.
Originally posted by: XabanakFanatik
Originally posted by: mb
Originally posted by: Quintox
What about coasting?
NO.
Whenever you are driving on public roads, you should always be in gear.
What's your reasoning behind this?
Originally posted by: mb
Originally posted by: XabanakFanatik
Originally posted by: mb
Originally posted by: Quintox
What about coasting?
NO.
Whenever you are driving on public roads, you should always be in gear.
What's your reasoning behind this?
Safety.
Originally posted by: XabanakFanatik
Originally posted by: mb
Originally posted by: XabanakFanatik
Originally posted by: mb
Originally posted by: Quintox
What about coasting?
NO.
Whenever you are driving on public roads, you should always be in gear.
What's your reasoning behind this?
Safety.
Thanks for the specific answer backed by logical reasoning. :roll:
Originally posted by: XabanakFanatik
Originally posted by: mb
Originally posted by: XabanakFanatik
Originally posted by: mb
Originally posted by: Quintox
What about coasting?
NO.
Whenever you are driving on public roads, you should always be in gear.
What's your reasoning behind this?
Safety.
Thanks for the specific answer backed by logical reasoning. :roll:
Originally posted by: JulesMaximus
Originally posted by: Eli
Originally posted by: LTC8K6
Why wouldn't the engine computer cut off the fuel if you downshift the auto? It should do so, shouldn't it? If so, that would be the way to save gas when slowing down, anyway.
That isn't what he asked, though.
It's been my experience that shifting into neutral while stopped causes the engines RPM to go up, not down. Which makes sense, considering it's taking the drivetrain load away from the engine. 😛
Since this is the case, I believe the engine will use more fuel while in neutral. But it is most likely going to be insignificant, both because RPM isn't the only factor in fuel economy and because most stop lights aren't 10 minutes long.
It might be a good idea to do it to save wear on your transmission fluid, though, especially f you live in a hot climate.
In reality you aren't going to save any measurable amount of fuel by shifting into neutral at a stoplight. You will certainly use more fuel by coasting in neutral but again, it will be a miniscule amount.
Personally, I'd rather leave the car in gear, that way you have drive if you need to get out of a situation quickly.
Originally posted by: Xyclone
Originally posted by: JulesMaximus
Originally posted by: Eli
Originally posted by: LTC8K6
Why wouldn't the engine computer cut off the fuel if you downshift the auto? It should do so, shouldn't it? If so, that would be the way to save gas when slowing down, anyway.
That isn't what he asked, though.
It's been my experience that shifting into neutral while stopped causes the engines RPM to go up, not down. Which makes sense, considering it's taking the drivetrain load away from the engine. 😛
Since this is the case, I believe the engine will use more fuel while in neutral. But it is most likely going to be insignificant, both because RPM isn't the only factor in fuel economy and because most stop lights aren't 10 minutes long.
It might be a good idea to do it to save wear on your transmission fluid, though, especially f you live in a hot climate.
In reality you aren't going to save any measurable amount of fuel by shifting into neutral at a stoplight. You will certainly use more fuel by coasting in neutral but again, it will be a miniscule amount.
Personally, I'd rather leave the car in gear, that way you have drive if you need to get out of a situation quickly.
Yup. Besides, when I was learning how to drive a MT, my friend told me to downshift instead of putting it into neutral. Besides the engine braking, he said that it is better for the tranny if you downshift down to at least 2nd gear when coming to a full stop. Can anyone shed some light on this?
...Originally posted by: IGBT
..no. tears up the u-joints.
There have been long threads on this, and the simple way to do this is the following:Originally posted by: Xyclone
Originally posted by: JulesMaximus
Originally posted by: Eli
Originally posted by: LTC8K6
Why wouldn't the engine computer cut off the fuel if you downshift the auto? It should do so, shouldn't it? If so, that would be the way to save gas when slowing down, anyway.
That isn't what he asked, though.
It's been my experience that shifting into neutral while stopped causes the engines RPM to go up, not down. Which makes sense, considering it's taking the drivetrain load away from the engine. 😛
Since this is the case, I believe the engine will use more fuel while in neutral. But it is most likely going to be insignificant, both because RPM isn't the only factor in fuel economy and because most stop lights aren't 10 minutes long.
It might be a good idea to do it to save wear on your transmission fluid, though, especially f you live in a hot climate.
In reality you aren't going to save any measurable amount of fuel by shifting into neutral at a stoplight. You will certainly use more fuel by coasting in neutral but again, it will be a miniscule amount.
Personally, I'd rather leave the car in gear, that way you have drive if you need to get out of a situation quickly.
Yup. Besides, when I was learning how to drive a MT, my friend told me to downshift instead of putting it into neutral. Besides the engine braking, he said that it is better for the tranny if you downshift down to at least 2nd gear when coming to a full stop. Can anyone shed some light on this?
Yes, it does, because the engine is loaded when it is in gear. It takes more gas to keep the engine idling with the trans engaged than it does when the engine is freewheeling in neutral.Originally posted by: Raduque
Originally posted by: Matthias99
Shifting to 'netural' in any AT-equipped car I've driven definitely disengages the transmission and results in lower RPMs (which should use less gas).
Uh... what? My truck idles at ~600rpm in gear... in Neutral or Park, it idles at 900rpm. Shifting to neutral doesn't save gas.
Your engine is OFF at low speeds? Care to rephrase?Originally posted by: Dulanic
Nope my engine stays off at stops and low speeds.
he shuts his engine off, so he can coast with no fuel usage at all!!!Originally posted by: Pacfanweb
Your engine is OFF at low speeds? Care to rephrase?Originally posted by: Dulanic
Nope my engine stays off at stops and low speeds.
The theory is that the pads against the rotor allow the rest of the rotor to cool while the area under the pads stays hot and that the differential in cooling rate causes warping. It's possible if you heat the rotors to red hot on a racetrack or something, but it's still unlikely even then. On the street it's such an incredibly small probability that it can be ignored.Originally posted by: Pacfanweb
And someone explain to me why keeping the brakes applied to a hot rotor would warp it. Because it won't. So the rotor is hot. Big deal. You're squeezing it from both sides. Big deal. That's not going to warp it, unless you have it nearly red-hot, and even then it's questionable.