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Home > General > Manual or Automatic? |
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Largered Member Since: 10 Jul 2016 Location: UK Posts: 1978 |
... and wiser ????
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21st Jan 2018 12:37 pm |
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Bobupndown Member Since: 26 Dec 2014 Location: Upside down behind the TV! Posts: 2805 |
What age qualifies as "Old men"? I'm early 40s...... Landrover - turning owners into mechanics since 1948 2014 Orkney grey Freelander SD4 GS. 2004 Zambezi silver Discovery 2 Td5 (Gone) 1963 Surf blue Morris Mini Minor Super de Luxe (my little toy) |
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21st Jan 2018 12:54 pm |
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theglassman Member Since: 08 Jan 2010 Location: Oxfordshire Posts: 105 |
Absolutely agree. The SD4/Auto combination is spot-on. If you wish to play at gear changing, you just pull the lever across the gate. .... and, yes, I’m an older person - but I think of it as becoming grown-up! I've decided to stop being a good example and will now just be a terrible warning..... 2008 TD4HSE - gone but much loved. 2014MY SD4 Metropolis - very much loved. |
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21st Jan 2018 12:56 pm |
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IanMetro Member Since: 11 Sep 2017 Location: Somerset BS21 Posts: 3133 |
Bobupndown -- I'm afraid you should have some way to go, but perhaps you just got wiser earlier. I was 70 before I was wise enough to choose an auto. I did so because although I enjoyed practicing the hand/foot co-ordination of a manual, I thought that the limited rev range of a diesel (as apposed to petrol) might make for a tiresome drive. Also I had not forgotten the ease of driving an aircraft towing tractor (manual box (high/low, but a large torque converter) , or the ease of the cars I had with electrically operated overdrive (common in the 60s and 70s). I find that, with the auto, the FL2 selects the right gear and moves swiftly to match the speed of the traffic in any lane into which I chose to move. Useful on the motorway, as is the superb visibility from the high driving position. (Largered, Easier can be wiser) FL2 XS SD4 Auto 2010 2012-2017 (21k - 91k miles) (MY2011) FL2 Metropolis SD4 Auto 2014 2017- (16k - 77k+ miles) (MY2015) Metro in its 11th Year of (Extended) LR Warranty / Full LR Service History (Expensive, but Trouble/Worry free - hopefully?) |
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21st Jan 2018 4:10 pm |
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Dave47 Member Since: 31 Aug 2014 Location: Margate Kent Posts: 1333 |
Having my left knee driving L/R series and Defenders over the years when I brought my D2 TD5 I went for an auto and boy what a difference it made, so naturally the Freelander is Auto too,
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21st Jan 2018 4:36 pm |
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Tigger Member Since: 30 Mar 2011 Location: L15KRD Posts: 2555 |
It sounds like you are the kind of dyed-in-the-wool manual gearbox user that I once was. I wouldn’t consider an auto and hated them! Then autos got better and better and I found that some cars and some kinds of driving are just better suited to autos. Big 4x4’s are a case in point. It took me a long time to find that out! Don’t wait until you’re an “old man” to find that one out |
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21st Jan 2018 4:39 pm |
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RealBeale Member Since: 13 Jun 2016 Location: Birmingham Great Barr Posts: 911 |
My first auto was a F1 V6. Instantly found it much easier and relaxing without constantly stirring the manual box. Hill starts, traffic lights etc etc...........not that I'm not a capable or competent driver, but stuff like this gets tiring on long journeys or even to and from work with the amount of stop/start traffic and traffic lights in such close proximity. Just can't be arsed grabbing for that gearstick all the time. Especially when off roading, constantly slipping the clutch, which I found myself doing a lot in the Freelander 1.
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21st Jan 2018 5:02 pm |
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blacktiger Member Since: 31 Oct 2015 Location: St.Leonards on sea Posts: 564 |
I prefer my current SD4auto over my previous TD4 manual. Some of that is probably down to being able to apply all of the 190bhp (and the torque) rather than having to be careful when applying the throttle on the 160bhp TD4 because the clutch would start to slip. The clutch on my TD4 was going (badly) at 70000 miles.
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21st Jan 2018 5:32 pm |
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Largered Member Since: 10 Jul 2016 Location: UK Posts: 1978 |
I've had autos in the past, as hire cars.
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21st Jan 2018 5:48 pm |
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Lightwater Member Since: 21 Aug 2014 Location: Sydney Northern Beaches Posts: 4906 |
Did a bit of off road recently crawling over rocks, I would not want to have a manual! Procrastination, mankind's greatest labour saving device!
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21st Jan 2018 7:10 pm |
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Tigger Member Since: 30 Mar 2011 Location: L15KRD Posts: 2555 |
Having had hire and loan cars that were automatics, I hated them. It wasn't until my first, of many, trips to LRE centres that I got to use automatic Freelander 2's off road that it started to click. One of the first things that the instructor said was that all of the cars (with the obvious exception of the Defenders) were autos as it made them easier to use and train in off road.
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21st Jan 2018 9:26 pm |
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EYorkshire Member Since: 18 Nov 2010 Location: (!) Posts: 4392 |
Two legs for two pedals and both hands on the wheel, is it that hard to understand. |
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21st Jan 2018 10:43 pm |
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mcsimmo Member Since: 01 Feb 2016 Location: North of the South Posts: 734 |
Had both a manual and an auto, also I tow a tin tent. The auto is a dream to drive both with and without the tintent on the back,
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22nd Jan 2018 6:56 am |
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Worms Member Since: 31 Oct 2017 Location: Highlands Posts: 635 |
Lol! I was beginning to believe the Commandshift propaganda on this thread until I read the parallel thread about Commandshift! http://www.freel2.com/forum/topic30950.html
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22nd Jan 2018 7:38 am |
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