Chattanooga Times Free Press

PUTTING CAR IN NEUTRAL AT STOPLIGHTS DOESN’T HARM TRANSMISSI­ON

- BY RAY MAGLIOZZI

Dear Car Talk:

I’m a lifetime fan of Car Talk. So, I’m LAZY! SO lazy that I live where all the roads are flat in Miami so I don’t have to deal with inclines. I’m also so lazy that when I’m stopped at a light or stuck in traffic, I put the car in neutral so I don’t need to keep my foot on the brake. I drive an automatic 2001 Mazda 626. Am I causing any damage to the transmissi­on by doing this? -- Sean I don’t think you can hold a lazy candle to my late brother, Sean. He often was too lazy to put up the top on his ‘74 Chevy convertibl­e.

So what, you say? Well, when a garden eventually sprouted up in the back seat of his car, he was also too lazy to weed it. Otherwise, he could have at least had some fresh tomatoes.

I don’t think you’re harming the transmissi­on, Sean. I’m basing that in part on the fact that your transmissi­on has already lasted 17 years, despite your sloth.

We used to recommend against this practice. But that was when cars routinely idled at 1,000 rpm or more. At that engine speed, the various components of the drivetrain (the gears, the transmissi­on, the CV joints) would kind of “slam” into each other every time you put the car into drive. You may remember feeling that “thunk” in the old days.

But now, with computer-controlled engine management and fuel injection, most cars idle at about half that speed. So, once the car warms up (after a minute or so) and it’s idling at 600 rpm, when you shift from neutral into drive, you hardly even notice it. And neither does your car.

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