OD on or off?
This is just a poll really. I just want to hear what people do. Do you all drive your atx trucks around with the OD off or on usually? I'm talking around town not towing anything. I only turn the OD on when I'm on the highway. When I'm around town I turn it off.
Just curious to hear from you all.
Just curious to hear from you all.
Since every time I turn the truck on, its on. I just leave it on. The only time I really turn it off is when driving on steep grades. More power going up and not having to ride the brake coming down. Also with it being electronic I figure the less I mess with it the less of a chance of it breaking.
ORIGINAL: Daksport1pa
Since every time I turn the truck on, its on. I just leave it on. The only time I really turn it off is when driving on steep grades. More power going up and not having to ride the brake coming down. Also with it being electronic I figure the less I mess with it the less of a chance of it breaking.
Since every time I turn the truck on, its on. I just leave it on. The only time I really turn it off is when driving on steep grades. More power going up and not having to ride the brake coming down. Also with it being electronic I figure the less I mess with it the less of a chance of it breaking.
Unless I'm going up a steep hill (or towing, which I don't do), I just let it do its thing.
I was told by a wise transmission man once that you should dissable the OD in city traffic. When in OD the 'freewheel' action when coasting causes the sprag clutch to wear sooner. I have actually seen a few cases where these things break or just basically melt down.
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ORIGINAL: dodgedlr
I was told by a wise transmission man once that you should dissable the OD in city traffic. When in OD the 'freewheel' action when coasting causes the sprag clutch to wear sooner. I have actually seen a few cases where these things break or just basically melt down.
I was told by a wise transmission man once that you should dissable the OD in city traffic. When in OD the 'freewheel' action when coasting causes the sprag clutch to wear sooner. I have actually seen a few cases where these things break or just basically melt down.
ORIGINAL: dodgedlr
I was told by a wise transmission man once that you should dissable the OD in city traffic. When in OD the 'freewheel' action when coasting causes the sprag clutch to wear sooner. I have actually seen a few cases where these things break or just basically melt down.
I was told by a wise transmission man once that you should dissable the OD in city traffic. When in OD the 'freewheel' action when coasting causes the sprag clutch to wear sooner. I have actually seen a few cases where these things break or just basically melt down.
If most, say 50% to 75% of your driving is local city driving below 40 mph, you should turn it off. If most of your driving is highway above 45 mph, then it would be best to leave it on. Turning it off around town prevents the lockup converter from constantly engaging and disengaging, which causes wear. It has been my experience that using overdrive around town has very little impact on fuel economy.
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