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thamarkman March 17th, 2005, 12:07 AM Do you use your overdrive while doing city driving? Say between 35 and 45 mph. I would like to know what everyone does because I think its bad to have your tranny constantly shifting in and out of overdrive. This question mainly applies to AOD's and such. In short, I think overdrive is mainly for freeway use and traveling above 40mph for long periods of time. Does anyone else have a different opinion?
klutch March 17th, 2005, 01:23 AM I always use Drive below 45 MPH I find it performs better to atleast in my case
TownCar March 17th, 2005, 01:28 AM I asked the same question elsewhere. My concern was whether or not the engine was stressed unnecessarilly at low speeds in OD. Seems to me the less "load" on the engine, the longer it'll last.
I was advised to leave the OD system on until I needed it off, like passing or driving up/down hills. The reason I was given was, the OD fluid valve and fluid circuits would stay cleaner and less prone to failure with regular usage.
I do see your point though, regarding the friction band :)
Dereck March 17th, 2005, 10:03 AM Hi Themarkman
I drive everywhere in OD unless the transmission starts to hunt for the right gear, such as when driving along a hilly road.
Regards
Dereck
crazyman March 17th, 2005, 10:24 AM :I I drive in OD %99.5 percent of the time. I've owned alot of cars in my short time, and I've never lost a tranny or an engine. My mom had a Hyundai, and she constantly shifted in and out of OD.Guess what, tranny crapped out at 65,000 miles.
purelux March 17th, 2005, 03:02 PM That is absolutely meaningless on a completely different car besides its a hundai. I leave od off almost all the time unless cruising at a consistant speed which I neaver do for long at all in the city. My dad neaver shifts out of o/d and his 97 continental shifts hard out of 1st gear and drops to 1st when comming to a stop. o/d isn't for city driving if you have a tach or listen you'll notice moreso. Plus if your driving normally your not racing the engine and you aren't "stressing the engine" I had a 91 t-bird v8 usually not in o/d shifted just fine for the 4 years I owned it and about 60k I put on it ontop of the 33k it had on when bought. 94 crownvic owned for about 2 years 30k miles or so. I have had my 98 towncar for a bit under 2 years and the tranny on it runs excellent as well. Just becuase o/d will engage about 40 on most cars doesn't mean it should be used at that speed. Its designed for highway crusing at a consistant speed. Do what you want but the wear caused to the o/d band and that hunting noise which is heat building. And the tranny is going to be alot more expensive to fix than the engine. And if the engine is well taken care of fluids changed pcv replaced etc... You shouldn't have any problems.
Jamler3 March 17th, 2005, 04:08 PM If I'm doing all city stuff I'll turn O/D off, otherwise I leave it on...
I do however use it as a downshift often... When I'm on the Hwy cruisin along
and come upon my exit... I often click off the OD to help slow down.
IS THIS A DAMAGING TO THE TRANNY?? Let me know because this is like habit w/me!
BTW, I've not had any trans problems, but I do service every 20K
thamarkman March 18th, 2005, 09:26 PM why not just use your brakes? Those are easier to replace than your tranny. I'm not saying its bad, but its probably not good either.
D-Ice March 22nd, 2005, 11:29 PM We usually drive it in OD like all the time. I never thought twice about it. I also do about 70% of the driving on the highway anyway.
I own a 90, and it has 111,000 some miles on it, so I mean if I did switch it the od on and off I would be saving a bit of tranny life, but I was hoping to buy a new one soon anyway.
But I always loved the roar of the last BIG V8! (5.0L)
gadget73 March 23rd, 2005, 10:26 AM I do the manual D shift when the tranny hunts, or when running under about 45 in stop/go traffic. Mine will actually kick into OD around 35-40 if not accelerating, which I personally find annoying.
jcdessertenne May 6th, 2005, 02:55 AM What I do is below 45mph I do D, and when I am on the freeway and drive around 60 mph I do OD. When I live home I stay on D, an dbefore getting on the freeway I shift to OD.
That's what I do, and it's been running fine.
devicemanager May 6th, 2005, 08:01 AM I always leave the card in OD except when I need a little umph going up a hill of if I want to pass someone quickly on the expressway. If you hit it and turn off the od at the same time you get catapulted! It's sick, I just don't know if that is healthy for the trans.
Sifrino3 May 6th, 2005, 08:47 AM I always drive in "D", Unless I get onto a hwy or above 40-45 mph. Because "OD" comes on very early. Plus, "OD" in Sifrino is going out because it was always driven in "OD." I changed my habbits. . .
bumpin95towncar May 16th, 2005, 02:31 PM i use o/d only on teh highway when i see the police running radar it slows me down w/out him seeing brakelights
KainDTE May 16th, 2005, 05:23 PM Well i always drive in OD and have had no problems what soever with my tranny... my dad is a mechanic and he knows more about cars than anyone i know and i asked him awhile ago and he says it wont hurt the tranny i have 120K on my car and it has always been used in OD so... i cant see anything wrong with running it in OD
Geezer April 4th, 2008, 06:15 PM These trannys were made to run in O/D. If you are going up and down mountains and want to use the engine for braking then taking it out of O/D would be fine. The Lincoln should have enough power not to hunt when chasing hills.
Crownvic August 11th, 2011, 11:19 AM I've driven 4.6 panthers for the past 18 years and always use OD. However I think it is largely dependent on your axle ratio (gears) and your wheel size. It all comes down to what rpm's you are running at the speeds you are driving. If I had high gearing and big 18" wheels with tall sidewalls I would probably be in Drive all the time. With low gears and 15" wheels with low profile tires Overdrive is the stuff.
Vic
chris2523 August 11th, 2011, 01:35 PM if it was really that bad on the trans to be in overdrive around 35-40 mph, the engineers would have designed it not to do that. just let the trans do its thing. it will be fine.
if the trans fails prematurely, there is probably more at play than just whether or not it was in OD or not.
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