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Home > General > Claim: Auto FL2 will be bad in snow |
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parallax33 Member Since: 29 Jul 2011 Location: Chandlers Ford Posts: 316 |
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24th Aug 2012 10:41 pm |
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AiiEEX Member Since: 30 Sep 2010 Location: Norfolk way Posts: 642 |
Tell this manager that he is correct and that you have probably made a huge mistake getting the auto version.
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24th Aug 2012 11:35 pm |
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athelstan Member Since: 03 Nov 2009 Location: Reality Posts: 2658 |
Smart thinking |
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25th Aug 2012 8:10 am |
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MartynB Member Since: 08 Aug 2011 Location: Currently Rootless ! Posts: 1780 |
because I still have my dear departed dad's voice ringing in my head from 40 years ago " you burn the clutch out and you will change it !" in a tricky situation it's a lot better for me to have both hands on the wheel and not worry about slipping the clutch still each to his own 2009 GS Auto Zermatt Silver - Sold June 21 after 10 years of ownership 2016 Subaru Outback SE 2.0 diesel SE Premium Lineartronic Sold 2024 after 8 years and 80k miles . Best Car I ever owned ! 2023 Toyota Hilux invincible X 2.8 Auto . |
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25th Aug 2012 8:25 am |
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donny Member Since: 05 Mar 2010 Location: Usually knocking about the north Posts: 215 |
My auto with Wintracs fitted was unstoppable in the heavy winters we had a couple of years ago - even better than my D3. I went out of my way to try and get it stuck but it was having none of it - absolutely superb. |
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25th Aug 2012 9:22 am |
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athelstan Member Since: 03 Nov 2009 Location: Reality Posts: 2658 |
Not that old motoring chestnut again It is in the same vain as the debate over on which side of the road is it safest to drive - RHS or LHS. There is no clear winner If you are a heavy footed clot with little or no sensitivity for the "biting" aka take off point you will damage the clutch prematurely; on the other hand a sentient driver will enjoy tens of thousands of miles of trouble free manual gear change motoring over all types of terrain surfaces - with or without a towed unit There is only one environment where it can reasonably be claimed that an Auto box is "superior" to a Manual box and that is on densely conjested urban roads. With the average speed across London now down to 8mph., the stop go slow slow stop with a manual gear change creates additional driver fatigue. And so from a comfort perspective (reduced stress) the auto change is desirable Indeed it is no coincidence that that other comfort aid - the cruise control - was introduced. Driving hundreds of miles daily across repetitive prairie landscapes without lifting your right foot every now and again created discomfort levels that the driver sought to erradicate. And so the industry responded with the cruise control. Some legislative bodies sought to ban the device on the grounds of safety - and indeed they were right to do so (not that it would burn out like a clutch and suffer premature failure resulting in the halting of the vehicle) but in the wrong hands such a device could cause a fatal crash that would not just halt the vehicle, rather, scrap the vehicle and it's occupants for ever For myself, despite the pros and cons, I enjoy the use of both Cruise Control and a Manual Gear change. Because both enhance my driving experience, as well as save me money. In fuel expenditure |
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25th Aug 2012 9:48 am |
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taztastic Member Since: 03 Feb 2011 Location: North West Posts: 8652 |
The word "manager" says it all........anyone with that title these days usually has an Audi, slicked hair and an aptitude for knowing very little about anything but believe every word of their own drivel.
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25th Aug 2012 9:55 am |
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Lookers Park Royal Member Since: 11 Dec 2007 Location: London Posts: 607 |
An Auto induces less wheel-spin naturally and is therefore better (but only marginally)........ fact!
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25th Aug 2012 12:04 pm |
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Lebtiw Member Since: 12 Dec 2012 Location: South Wales uk Posts: 5 |
Hi I have a freelander 2 xs td4 2011 & it snowed a couple of days ago by me. I went to go out in the jeep but got stuck on the flat & was spinning. It was only light snow. It felt like the jeep was trying to control my driving & not me I tried knocking the traction off & switching to mud ruts, snow, sand etc but nothing worked I was stuck. I have normal road tyres but I have heard many people saying that theirs is great in the snow with road tyres so what am I doing wrong?
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12th Dec 2012 1:00 pm |
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Ooma Member Since: 14 Mar 2012 Location: Uk Posts: 94 |
Which tyres do you have? although it still sounds surprising that this happened on light snow. '08 Freelander 2 HSE in Stornoway Grey
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12th Dec 2012 1:07 pm |
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npinks Member Since: 28 Jun 2007 Location: Ls25 Posts: 20090 |
if you have a LANDROVER FL2 what made you go out in the JEEP
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12th Dec 2012 1:18 pm |
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Big Dave Member Since: 22 Nov 2009 Location: Yorkshire Posts: 1055 |
Sounds like either;
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12th Dec 2012 2:11 pm |
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Lebtiw Member Since: 12 Dec 2012 Location: South Wales uk Posts: 5 |
I have Pirelli tyres on there 18" they came standard with the fl2.
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12th Dec 2012 9:40 pm |
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npinks Member Since: 28 Jun 2007 Location: Ls25 Posts: 20090 |
Maybe filled the tread with mud from the grass, then tyres became slicks and no grip
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12th Dec 2012 9:43 pm |
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