Quote:
Originally Posted by Loren
I never downshift with the intention of slowing the car. I do downshift to keep the revs up so that DFCO stays engaged and uses no fuel. But, if you're talking about a hard stop, it's clutch in and hard on the brakes.
With an automatic, you might feel the car downshifting as you brake, but with such a wimpy engine (at idle) behind it, it's not likely to be a problem. I think you'd be at more risk by trying to rapidly shift to neutral because you could accidentally find reverse, which would not be pretty. (did that once when I was 16 and driving a car that wouldn't idle in gear... fortunately, I wasn't going very fast)
Best bet: If you're making a quick stop, forget about the gear lever and just concentrate on BRAKING. If you have a manual transmission, clutch in. Simple.
(where things get interesting is on a race track where not only do you want to slow down rapidly, but you also want to downshift to a lower gear at the same time to accelerate out of the turn that you're slowing for... but that's another story)
|
HEEEEEEEEEEEL TOEEEEEEEEEEEE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
If you guys want to rock the techncials, turning on anything that draws electrical power on your car, can worsen your gas mileage.
Btw, I remember popping my moms van, with the column shifter, into reverse at 60 mph. It just stalled out, and took itself out of gear. I put it back into D, and all was normal again.