When I'm stationary and give the throttle a little blip, the engine revs up nice and fast but if I'm moving at more than about 3mph and blip the throttle, the engine revs much slower. Why would this be?
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
One for the gurus... :)
Collapse
X
-
Yeah sorry - it's a manual. When I'm stationary (ie, at the lights), it doesnt matter if I'm in neutral or just have the clutch in - I can sit there like a boy racer revving the engine freely.
If I'm moving, and press the clutch and then rev the engine, it just revs much slower. I can't explain it any other way really... Thinking about it, I haven't tried putting it in neutral while rolling, so might try that later.
I'm guessing its supposed to be like that, but I just don't know why.
Comment
-
Originally posted by bimmaman View PostYeah sorry - it's a manual. When I'm stationary (ie, at the lights), it doesnt matter if I'm in neutral or just have the clutch in - I can sit there like a boy racer revving the engine freely.
If I'm moving, and press the clutch and then rev the engine, it just revs much slower. I can't explain it any other way really... Thinking about it, I haven't tried putting it in neutral while rolling, so might try that later.
I'm guessing its supposed to be like that, but I just don't know why.
If it isn't a problem, don't make it one.'96 Toyota Hilux Surf SSR-G - RIP
Comment
-
Originally posted by bimmaman View PostHaha, I'm not trying to make it a problem, I'm just curious is all
I tested it again last night, this time putting it in neutral and the same thing happened. Just seems odd to me :/
To clarify my theory, an auto tranny vehicle ecu knows when it's in "park" because the gear selector tells it so, and things like idle speed, etc, change as a result. In a manual tranny vehicle, there's no "park" position, so it uses the VSS to tell if the vehicle is stationary or not, and the ecu reacts differently as a result.'96 Toyota Hilux Surf SSR-G - RIP
Comment
Comment