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TIPS OF THE WEEK 5 Things You Need To Stop Doing If Your Car Has An Automatic Transmissi­on

- (Source: SlashGear)

Automatic transmissi­ons have been the dominating automotive format for decades now. While manual transmissi­ons are cool, the simple fact of the matter is that shifting an automatic into drive and forgetting about it for the duration of your trip is a much easier, lower-stress way to travel which is why stick shifts are a dying breed. That being said, just because an automatic transmissi­on takes a lot less guesswork to use than a manual transmissi­on, that doesn’t mean that you can disregard its intricacie­s entirely.

Automatic transmissi­ons are built in a very particular way to easily facilitate travel without the need for transmissi­on minutiae. If you try to use them in the same way you’d use a manual transmissi­on, or otherwise try to circumvent their operation with little “tricks,” you’ll end up doing a lot more harm than good. Certain bad habits can wear out the transmissi­on’s components, making it harder to use, and in the worst-case scenario, breaking it entirely and necessitat­ing a mechanic visit.

Shifting between drive, reverse and park in motion

Generally, the only times you ever shift an automatic transmissi­on are when you’re driving, reversing, or parking. Since these three states of being are more or less antithetic­al to each other, you should, in theory, never have any reason to switch between drive, reverse, and park unless you’re already at a complete stop. However, if you’re in a rush or just feel gutsy, you may try to shift while you’re still in motion, such as dashing into a parking spot and slamming into park or cruising downhill in neutral. But you could be hurting your car without realizing it.

Besides just being generally unsafe, doing this is absolute murder on your transmissi­on. Automatic transmissi­ons — just like their manual counterpar­ts –aren’t designed to shift like this, so forcing a change while you’re in motion is kind of like trying to pound a square peg into a circular hole. It might go through, but the damage it causes is obvious.

Staying in drive while parked

Whenever your car is at rest outside of an active traffic zone, such as a parking space or a driveway, you’re supposed to put the shifter in park and take your feet off the pedals. This is the best thing to do both for your transmissi­on and your own comfort, especially if you’re going to be hanging around for a while. If you’re planning on making some kind of quick escape from your parking spot, though, such as when you’re picking up a friend, you might just stay in park and keep your foot on the brake.

If you leave the car in drive while you’re parked, the engine will stay warmed up, and if you do this frequently for long periods of time, the engine may start to slowly overheat. An overheated engine is more susceptibl­e to sudden hardware failure. So shift into park when stopped so it can take a proper rest.

Flooring it

Flooring the gas pedal on a car, also known as “launching,” is one of those awful temptation­s you get the first time you get behind the wheel, right up there with revving the engine in park and doing donuts in a parking lot. Even putting aside the obvious hazards of going from zero to ludicrous, though, flooring your gas from a complete stop is actually quite damaging to your transmissi­on. The whole reason you’re supposed to carefully and cautiously accelerate from a stopped position is that your transmissi­on needs a moment to get going before it can handle higher speeds. Flooring the gas puts an immediate, intense strain on the transmissi­on, andif it’s cold out, flooring the gas will rev the engine before it has time to warm up and circulate fuel. That can damage the cold metal components.

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