Dan Murphy
We are family.
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- Apr 20, 2000
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You are correct, Charade, always keep in OD except in special circumstances, some of which you listed.
Pin Wizard said:Interesting thread. I've been wondering about it myself. There was a thread on here a couple weeks about OD. Got me wondering. I have a button to turn it on or off. Now I know why in the past I'd try to pass a car and it took forever, if I was lucky enough to not have someone zip in the space I had any way.Only recently I've started turning OD off when I'm passing on the highway. Wow! Does it zip along!
Definitely an improvement. But that's the only time I turn it off.
I've been driving my 98 Taurus in OD the entire time I've had it and right now it's not running so well. It started giving me trouble when I was driving through the mountain pass up a steep grade in cruise control going about 70mph. It still holds oil and water but sounds like it's on it's last legs. I'm afraid to drive it in D now but I think I'll give it a try in the city and see if it runs any better.
And the information is just as current as it was 14 years ago.And you managed to find, and bump a 14 year old thread as your first post on a Disney board? Welcome to the DIS!![]()
Thanks for the welcome! So I drove it in D around the city and it ran much better than it has been. There were a couple places I went where the speed went up to 55mph so when that happened I shifted it into OD until I got back to the 35mph zones. I was really surprised at how much better it drove not being in OD.
And the information is just as current as it was 14 years ago.
There are a lot more CVTs there days then there were 14 years ago. Back then the I only one I remember was the Honda Civic HX. Now some carmakers have the bulk of automatic transmissions as CVTs. I think Subaru only has CVT automatics now except maybe for the BRZ automatic.
As for "overdrive", that still where the gear ratio is less than 1. I've heard of some cars where there are two gears which are overdrive. For example, here's the gear ratios in a 2018 Ford Taurus:
First Gear Ratio: 4.48
Second Gear Ratio: 2.87
Third Gear Ratio : 1.84
Fourth Gear Ratio: 1.41
Fifth Gear Ratio : 1.00
Sixth Gear Ratio: 0.74
Reverse Ratio: 2.88
The only overdrive gear is 6th.
Those appear to me the exact same gear ratios as in my 2018 Ford Flex, probably the same transmission. But it goes into 6th just above 40 mph under normal operating conditions. The computer controls it all, so it shifts up and down a lot........a whole lot more than the 3 speed automatic in the 1987 Suburban I traded in.
I can actually feel a car I drive (a Honda) go into 4th/top gear just cruising on a city street at 35 before I get to a light. This doesn't have a gear indicator, although I'm not sure what cars do these days. This one is like every Honda automatic I've seen for years with a light up display to indicate the shift selection, which includes P/R/D/D3/2. But I can play around with it and put it into D3 and see the revs rise. But year I can of course tell what gear it's in by looking at the speedometer and tach. I also remember an older car where it would hunt between 4th and 3rd when going up certain inclines. The usual solution was to put it in D3 so it didn't keep on shifting between gears. But the newer computer controlled transmission are much better at not unnecessarily changing gears.
It's really weird too as I've test-driven a few newer manual transmission cars, and some of them even have gear indicators on the instrument cluster.