Who does it? I posted this here because it is more of a technique rather then specific to this type of car or drivetrain.
Im curious to hear each side of people's arguments. I do it all the time in the GTO (My bird is auto), rev matching of course, and just this morning I got to thinking, hmm, is this more wear on the engine?
I googled and found this from Wikipedia:
This is all opposed to throwing it in Nuetral and stopping solely on the brakes alone.
BTW, You don't waste any more gas decelerating and letting the RPM's fall because your vehicle will cut the fuel being fed.
I started messing with double clutching too for the hell of it. Comments?
P.S. ATTN L32Projekt... I'd appreciate if you don't post in here, lol. Your damn avatar or something locks my work computer up for every damn thread you post in!!! Maybe you'll change it buddy, pal? [img]tongue.gif[/img]
[ September 28, 2005, 11:44 AM: Message edited by: JusFlyinBy ]
Im curious to hear each side of people's arguments. I do it all the time in the GTO (My bird is auto), rev matching of course, and just this morning I got to thinking, hmm, is this more wear on the engine?
I googled and found this from Wikipedia:
Some feel that you abuse your manual transmission and engine by "engine braking". They feel that you should downshift only when you anticipate that the car will be in a lower speed for some time, not when coming to a full stop. In this case, downshift late, allowing the car to coast to pretty low engine RPM's before shifting down. When coming to a full stop, just allow the engine RPM's to drop somewhere near idling range, then put the car into neutral and coast to a stop using the brakes. The other side of the coin, some feel that engine breaking is relatively harmless on the engine and especially the transmission. The idea is that during decceleration the engine creates a vacuum in the cylinders which pull a very small amount of oil past the rings, increasing protection. This, combined with the fact that the forces involved are typically less than those normally seen during acceleration lead some to conclude that it will make no real difference in the lifetime of the engine and transmission.
BTW, You don't waste any more gas decelerating and letting the RPM's fall because your vehicle will cut the fuel being fed.
I started messing with double clutching too for the hell of it. Comments?
P.S. ATTN L32Projekt... I'd appreciate if you don't post in here, lol. Your damn avatar or something locks my work computer up for every damn thread you post in!!! Maybe you'll change it buddy, pal? [img]tongue.gif[/img]
[ September 28, 2005, 11:44 AM: Message edited by: JusFlyinBy ]
Comment