Aug-24-2013 06:20 PM
Aug-28-2013 04:54 AM
NCMODELA wrote:
When do people decide to floor it to downshift excepet on mountain grades?
Aug-25-2013 07:40 PM
Hybridhunter wrote:NCMODELA wrote:
Thanks, I do not normally run at 70, I run at 62, and I don't expect to run in the hills as fast as in the flats. I was running it a little higher to get a good feeling of how the TV would react, just for my knowledge. How do I know if the Torque Convertor is locked or not? Is there a light on the dash?
Experience or a Scangauge II. You can tell a converter is locked partially by feel. When it is UN-locked, you can see the rpm vary at the same speed, because there is slip.
As for the shifting, GM's really try to hold a gear, and are a little more reluctant to downshift. I personally like to set my cruise at a certain speed, and leave it on when climbing. I don't like being a nuisance to other drivers when it's as simple as, well, doing nothing but maybe downshifting, but that's just me.
Once you familiarize yourself with how your truck behaves, you may want to manually drop a gear when it starts struggling. 4500 rpm is about perfect on a smaller V8, it's where the engine makes most of it's "torque" (or highest horsepower at the lowest rpm). 4500 certainly shouldn't do any harm.
Aug-25-2013 06:05 PM
Aug-25-2013 05:45 PM
Aug-25-2013 05:16 PM
NCMODELA wrote:
Thanks, I do not normally run at 70, I run at 62, and I don't expect to run in the hills as fast as in the flats. I was running it a little higher to get a good feeling of how the TV would react, just for my knowledge. How do I know if the Torque Convertor is locked or not? Is there a light on the dash?
Aug-25-2013 06:59 AM
Hannibal wrote:
I set cruise with tow/haul on at 65mph on interstates and 60mph on backroads where that's the speed limit. On rolling hills where speed can be maintained, I've become familiar enough with my truck that if a hill is going to slow us down 5mph and downshift anyhow to regain that lost 5mph, I'll give the loud peddle a momentary push to the floor to cause an earlier downshift to maintain rather than regain speed. My 5.4L F250 with 3.73 runs 3800-4200rpm in those instances. Won't hurt a thing.
I did the same thing with my Cummins Rams with autos except instead of downshifting from direct to 3rd, they downshifted from O/D to direct. Didn't hurt them either.
Lugging to preserve a false sense of perception isn't good for either engine. Engines don't get tired like people do if you have to pedal your bike a little faster in a lower gear to get up a hill. Just the same, we don't walk very slowly for fear we're going to wear out our hearts if we walk at our normal gait. Same applies to our engines. Let them run in their normal rpm ranges. 4k rpm is just getting into the sb gas V8's power band.
Aug-25-2013 06:16 AM
64thunderbolt wrote:old guy wrote:
why do people have to think they need to go up hill at fast as they go on the flats????? so you slowed down , big deal. it is easier on the tow vehicle if you just let it have it's own way. I pulled cabbage hill in eastern Oregon today and went up doing 40 to 45 mph. a little faster than the semi's and a nice easy ascent. another thing you need to know, and that is TT tires are rated at 65 mph tops, not 70
not all trailer tires are rated for 65
Aug-25-2013 06:05 AM
old guy wrote:
why do people have to think they need to go up hill at fast as they go on the flats????? so you slowed down , big deal. it is easier on the tow vehicle if you just let it have it's own way. I pulled cabbage hill in eastern Oregon today and went up doing 40 to 45 mph. a little faster than the semi's and a nice easy ascent. another thing you need to know, and that is TT tires are rated at 65 mph tops, not 70
Aug-25-2013 04:56 AM
Aug-25-2013 04:35 AM
Aug-25-2013 12:16 AM
64thunderbolt wrote:old guy wrote:
why do people have to think they need to go up hill at fast as they go on the flats????? so you slowed down , big deal. it is easier on the tow vehicle if you just let it have it's own way. I pulled cabbage hill in eastern Oregon today and went up doing 40 to 45 mph. a little faster than the semi's and a nice easy ascent. another thing you need to know, and that is TT tires are rated at 65 mph tops, not 70
not all trailer tires are rated for 65
Aug-25-2013 12:12 AM
Aug-24-2013 10:38 PM
old guy wrote:
why do people have to think they need to go up hill at fast as they go on the flats????? so you slowed down , big deal. it is easier on the tow vehicle if you just let it have it's own way. I pulled cabbage hill in eastern Oregon today and went up doing 40 to 45 mph. a little faster than the semi's and a nice easy ascent. another thing you need to know, and that is TT tires are rated at 65 mph tops, not 70
Aug-24-2013 10:29 PM