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Volkswagon unveils car that gets 282 miles to the gallon.
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Volkswagon unveils car that gets 282 miles to the gallon.
Add acetone and K&N and this baby will go 290 mpg : )
On May 20, 9:42 pm, Useful Info > wrote: > Read all about it, hehttp://Muvy.org |
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Volkswagon unveils car that gets 282 miles to the gallon.
"EdV" > wrote in message
oups.com... > Add acetone and K&N and this baby will go 290 mpg : ) > > On May 20, 9:42 pm, Useful Info > wrote: >> Read all about it, hehttp://Muvy.org > > > Watch out for fuel saving actions, though. If the tires are properly inflated and you drive smoothly, you will have to ride the brakes to keep the tank from overflowing. |
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Volkswagon unveils car that gets 282 miles to the gallon.
I dont understand why VW described it as a 6 speed manual transmission
that shifts automatically. If its a manual its a manual, if its an automatic its automatic. It only has forward neutral and reverse so its automatic |
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Volkswagon unveils car that gets 282 miles to the gallon.
Just a guess:
The fluids in a traditional automatic transmission would rob that 8 HP Evinrude of precious power. Instead, they use a manual transmission and add electronic solenoids and switches to change the gears whenever the software calculates the optimal (i.e. most fuel efficient) shifting point. Maybe? But then, I'm sure Dan G would say, "All things being the same, you don't have a clue what you are talking about." "EdV" wrote: >I dont understand why VW described it as a 6 speed manual transmission > that shifts automatically. If its a manual its a manual, if its an > automatic its automatic. It only has forward neutral and reverse so > its automatic > |
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Volkswagon unveils car that gets 282 miles to the gallon.
On May 21, 9:02 am, EdV > wrote:
> I dont understand why VW described it as a 6 speed manual transmission > that shifts automatically. If its a manual its a manual, if its an > automatic its automatic. It only has forward neutral and reverse so > its automatic Automatic transmission is a specific type of automatic shifting mechanism. The normal automatic transmission has significant losses associated with it, amounting to approx 5-10% of power throughput. What they've done is taken a standard manual shift transmission and strapped an automatic shifting aparatus to it. |
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Volkswagon unveils car that gets 2.82 miles to the gallon.
"Volkswagon unveils car that gets 2.82 miles to the gallon." :-) It's called the _T_O_U_R_E_G_ :-) 'Curly' |
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Volkswagon unveils car that gets 282 miles to the gallon.
Isn't that what I said? Or, isn't shifting manually for the driver the same
as an electronic device that shifts a manual transmission? "Sir F. A. Rien" wrote: > Ahhh, but your caveat is "traditional" there are other 'automatic > transmissions' that 'shift' manually for the driver. To the operator it's > "Automatic!" > > So things are -=not the same=- and it's you who doesn't have a clue! > |
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Volkswagon unveils car that gets 282 miles to the gallon.
bill > wrote in
oups.com: > On May 21, 9:02 am, EdV > wrote: >> I dont understand why VW described it as a 6 speed manual >> transmission that shifts automatically. If its a manual its a manual, >> if its an automatic its automatic. It only has forward neutral and >> reverse so its automatic > > > Automatic transmission is a specific type of automatic shifting > mechanism. Yes... > The normal automatic transmission has significant losses > associated with it, amounting to approx 5-10% of power throughput. Not quite that much any more. This was true in the days of the Oldsmobile Hydra-Matic (1940), and the Buick Dynaflow (1948). These days it's almost 100% efficient. And in any case, the inefficiencies have nothing to do with the SHIFTING, but instead to do with the method of disconnecting engine power from the gearbox PRIOR to shifting. > What they've done is taken a standard manual shift transmission and > strapped an automatic shifting aparatus to it. > The gearbox setup is unimportant. You can have a selective-shift sliding-gear box, constant-mesh dog-clutch box, or a planetary unit or anything else, all automatically controlled. You can have a non-automatic planetary unit too, like the Ford Model-T's. (I'd be inclined to call that one a "manual", but the pedants among us would insist on the more correct term "pedal".) Bendix first developed an automatic clutch in 1932. This was offered on regular manual-style transmissions on several US makes. These worked well when set up properly, but were hideously high-maintenance, finicky and unreliable. The primary reason automakers eventually reverted to planetary gearboxes for automatic operation was that it was practically impossible to impose automatic control on a regular sliding-gear or constant-mesh manual-style box with the technology of the day. These days, with computer controls, there is no technical reason a manual-style transmission cannot be used with an automatic (or semi-auto) clutch and shifter. And so they do exist: SAAB had the Sensonic in 1995. Ferrari's F1 team had the Selespeed unit around 1990. The technology may eventually filter down to plebeian road cars one day, but that day would have to come once the mainstream automakers decide to replace their entire transmission tooling. -- Tegger The Unofficial Honda/Acura FAQ www.tegger.com/hondafaq/ |
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Volkswagon unveils car that gets 282 miles to the gallon.
Tegger > wrote in news:Xns9937B54D67FDEtegger@
207.14.116.130: > > And in any case, the inefficiencies have nothing to do with the > SHIFTING, but instead to do with the method of disconnecting engine > power from the gearbox PRIOR to shifting. ....Plus slippage at idle and on acceleration. I forgot that. Slippage at idle is a fundamental function of the fluid coupling, and the reason it was adopted in the first place. -- Tegger The Unofficial Honda/Acura FAQ www.tegger.com/hondafaq/ |
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