Albuquerque Journal

Tranny can handle shift into ‘R’

Brother-in-law shows automotive ignorance

- RAY MAGLIOZZI

DEAR CAR TALK: My brother-inlaw tells me that the worst thing I can do to my automatic transmissi­on is start the car and immediatel­y back out of my garage. His reasoning is that when the engine is warming up, it’s running faster than usual. So when my foot’s on the brake and I put the car in reverse, wham, the tranny slams up against wheels that won’t move. What do you say? — Rolf

That’s far from the worst thing you can do to your automatic transmissi­on, Rolf. Putting bananas in it instead of automatic transmissi­on fluid jumps immediatel­y to mind.

Your annoying brother-inlaw may have had a point 30 or 40 years ago. In the old days, when we had carburetor­s and mechanical chokes, you’d start up a cold car, and the engine would run at 2,500 rpm for the first five minutes. And sure, slamming the transmissi­on into gear when the engine was running that fast wasn’t exactly TLC for a transmissi­on.

But now that engines are computer-controlled, an engine that’s warming up will run at 1,000 rpm for 30 seconds, and then return to 750 rpm. So whatever strain you put on the transmissi­on is minimal to nonexisten­t.

Plus, you’re not going to sit there for that 30 seconds ”straining” the transmissi­on. Unless you have a garage fetish, you’re going to release the brake and start backing up.

So tell your brother-in-law that he’s wrong. That’s far from the worst thing you can do to your transmissi­on. Driving the car hard, especially accelerati­ng sharply and suddenly, is worse for the transmissi­on. And not only the transmissi­on, but all of the other drivetrain components.

So if you decide to pass a garbage truck and you pull out and put your foot to the floor, and the transmissi­on downshifts three gears and your back gets pinned to the seat, you’re shortening the life of your transmissi­on, and the rest of your car, far more than you ever could by putting it in reverse in your garage.

And here’s another thing that’s worse than what your brother-in-law suggests: Backing out of your driveway and using the transmissi­on to shift directions instead of stopping first. And don’t forget about neglecting to change the transmissi­on fluid when the manufactur­er recommends. That often leads to bananas (see above).

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