Results 31 to 39 of 39
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January 14th, 2009 10:43 AM #31
eh kung a/t kaya mga boss?... im driving a new jazz, yung may paddle shifter, in brekin-in period i used the manual mode (s mode). speed ko mga 80kph sa 4th gear, then baba ko ng 3rd, taas nga ng rpm but not in redline. (engine braking ba). any inputs about that...
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January 14th, 2009 10:49 AM #32
eh kung a/t kaya mga boss?... im driving a new jazz, yung may paddle shifter, in brekin-in period i used the manual mode (s mode). speed ko mga 80kph sa 4th gear, then baba ko ng 3rd, taas nga ng rpm but not in redline. (engine braking ba). any inputs about that...
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January 14th, 2009 11:29 AM #33
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January 14th, 2009 04:53 PM #34
It is highly recommended against shifting from D to N when the vehicle is moving. In case you'll have to shift it back to D without the vehicle stopping, the transmission can get damaged. Transmissions seek the lowest gear when initially engaged into D. So shifting from N to D at speed will force the car to shift to the lowest gear at speed, and that will kill the clutch packs the higher you are going, will cause a possible accident since your vehicle suddenly slows down but your brake lights do not light up, and you could lose control if you're in a slippery environment or made the shift while in a corner/turn.
Just RTFM
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January 14th, 2009 05:01 PM #35
It is highly recommended against shifting from D to N when the vehicle is moving. In case you'll have to shift it back to D without the vehicle stopping, the transmission can get damaged. Transmissions seek the lowest gear when initially engaged into D. So shifting from N to D at speed will force the car to shift to the lowest gear at speed, and that will kill the clutch packs the higher you are going, will cause a possible accident since your vehicle suddenly slows down but your brake lights do not light up, and you could lose control if you're in a slippery environment or made the shift while in a corner/turn.
Just RTFM
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January 15th, 2009 07:29 AM #36
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January 15th, 2009 09:35 AM #37
mga sir, OC lang ako but i think its engine BRAKING and not BREAKING.
anyway, naalala ko lang the thread starter drives a lancer.
my mechanic said engine braking in lancers (i drive an itlog) especially in high speed situations is not advisable in lancers bec of the risk of wearing out or even breaking the timing belt. and all mitsu owners know that breaking the timing belt is equivalent to the kiss of death for your engine.
ayun, change driving style na ako.
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Tsikot Member Rank 2
- Join Date
- Feb 2008
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- 577
January 15th, 2009 10:52 AM #38i also own a lancer. "hard engine braking" on my experience easily wears out the pressure plate fingers and bearing. i had mine replaced at 75k km
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February 4th, 2009 12:53 AM #39
i had the same practice when i used to drive a lancer, yung no no on hard engine braking ...
sa A/T naman, when I downshift to engine break, I just turn off the overdrive button.
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