JlNewb
New Member
- Joined
- Aug 6, 2018
- Threads
- 3
- Messages
- 4
- Reaction score
- 7
- Location
- New Mexico
- Vehicle(s)
- Wrangler JLU Sport
- Thread starter
- #1
Title is tongue in cheek but seriously, I learned to drive a stick on a late 80s Trooper in the mountains and drove that car for years. I’ve driven formula cars with no synchros, I know how to work a clutch. But the wife does not, and I’m still feeling my way around the automatic on my Wrangler for four wheeling.
The manumatic thing is...okay. Only chance I’ve gotten to go in 4L I just manually switched between first and second. But you obviously can’t ride the clutch at all so downshifting tends to lurch the car forward more than with a stick, have to push the brakes more. Do people leave it in D in 4L on the trails? It feels like it wants to race downhill like all automatics but maybe I didn’t give it a fair chance. Haven’t done any real climbing yet but I also don’t want a sudden upshift when I need the torque. Does keeping it in 1/2 put extra strain on the transmission?
Thanks!
The manumatic thing is...okay. Only chance I’ve gotten to go in 4L I just manually switched between first and second. But you obviously can’t ride the clutch at all so downshifting tends to lurch the car forward more than with a stick, have to push the brakes more. Do people leave it in D in 4L on the trails? It feels like it wants to race downhill like all automatics but maybe I didn’t give it a fair chance. Haven’t done any real climbing yet but I also don’t want a sudden upshift when I need the torque. Does keeping it in 1/2 put extra strain on the transmission?
Thanks!
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