Support VWWC

Page 1 of 3 123 LastLast
Results 1 to 10 of 28

Thread: Can D Mode cause long term engine damage?

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Feb 2011
    Location
    Sydney
    Posts
    32
    Users Country Flag

    Can D Mode cause long term engine damage?

    Disclaimer: I wasn't sure whether this post belonged to the DSG thread and if so, please move it.

    As the thread title says, everytime I drive in D mode I can't help but feel that I'm doing some long term engine damage by driving it underpowered.

    Hitting 6th gear at 60km/hr sitting at ~1300-~1500 rpm just doesn't feel right.

    For the first 1000km I've driven in a combination of S/Manual mode to avoid this issue. Even the manual mentions not to drive the engine underpowered during the run-in period, yet they go and put stupid programming on D mode.
    2011 Volkswagen Golf R | Black 19" |
    2007 HSV VE Clubsport R8 (sold)
    2005 Subaru Impreza WRX MY06 (sold)

  2. #2
    Join Date
    May 2005
    Location
    Point Cook, Vic
    Posts
    5,191
    Users Country Flag
    during the run in period you want to put load on the engine moreso than revs. D would probably be better suited than S
    If the car is shifting up to 6th I would think that you arent applying any throttle so I dont think you will be causing any issue.

    At the end of the day what you want to do is use the throttle. Dont baby it. But dont over rev it.

    PERFORMANCE, STYLING AND OEM PRODUCTS FOR YOUR VW

    FOLLOW US ON FACEBOOK

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Feb 2009
    Location
    Sydney, Australia
    Posts
    8,362
    Users Country Flag
    What Tim said.
    During run in period you obviously want to vary the load and the revs. To be honest, with these modern cars, it seems like the "run in" ideals are changing to some form of "wait until the oil is at running temps, and then drive it like you stole it" - as early as possible in its life.

    As for once you're past the run in period, no, 6th gear at 60km/h at 1300rpm is fine. As soon as the load exceeds what is safe for those revs/speed, the DSG will drop down. If you actually have an appropriate amount of throttle, the shift-down will be almost seamless (if your throttle load is too low during a shift down, there is a ~800ms "gap" in power delivery).

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Feb 2011
    Location
    Sydney
    Posts
    32
    Users Country Flag Thread Starter
    I'd have to say I subscribe to the "wait until the oil is at running temps, and then drive it like it was designed to be driven" method.
    I've done it with my WRX and HSV and owned both cars past 50,000 k's without any issues, so it must work

    The only downside with this car is such a high fuel consumption for a 2.0L engine.

    I've been trying to stick with D mode over the last few days, but I always find myself downshifting to get into that 2-2.5k rpm range.
    2011 Volkswagen Golf R | Black 19" |
    2007 HSV VE Clubsport R8 (sold)
    2005 Subaru Impreza WRX MY06 (sold)

  5. #5
    Join Date
    May 2008
    Location
    Mindarie, Perth (WA)
    Posts
    1,472
    Users Country Flag
    Quote Originally Posted by Zoza View Post
    I'd have to say I subscribe to the "wait until the oil is at running temps, and then drive it like it was designed to be driven" method.
    I've done it with my WRX and HSV and owned both cars past 50,000 k's without any issues, so it must work
    I wouldn't put 50k kms as a benchmark. In fact....the value of a correct run in process will be realised at 3x (or more) that mileage.
    MY16 Touareg 4.2Lt V8 TDI/Pure White LED lightbox/REDARC Brake Controller/ Racechip/iDrive Throttle controller
    2008 GOLF .:R32/5DR DBPE DSG/SUNROOF/RNS510/PRIVACY TINT/CONTI SC3s/MILLTEK CATBACK NON-RES/9W2 BT/"MYR-032"

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Feb 2011
    Location
    Sydney
    Posts
    32
    Users Country Flag Thread Starter
    Quote Originally Posted by FJ Steve View Post
    I wouldn't put 50k kms as a benchmark. In fact....the value of a correct run in process will be realised at 3x (or more) that mileage.
    I've never owned a car with that many miles on it... My usual turnaround for cars is always around ~3 years even though I tell myself (or get told by the wife) that this is it, I'm keeping this car until it breaks down.
    2011 Volkswagen Golf R | Black 19" |
    2007 HSV VE Clubsport R8 (sold)
    2005 Subaru Impreza WRX MY06 (sold)

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Dec 2010
    Location
    Brisbane, QLD
    Posts
    506
    Users Country Flag
    FWIW, in 2001 when I got the 200SX, I didn't "baby" the engine, but I didn't go over 5000rpm for the first 1000km. And I did vary the load (both acceleration, and engine breaking). After the first 1000km I then started to drive it a bit harder - that said I didn't see my first rev-limiter until 5000km in. It took about 2-3 months to get to 5000km.

    I've now got 160,000km on the dial, and the car still makes almost 200rwKW, with no sign of any problems whatsoever.
    My car: MY18 Arteon
    My car #2: MY22 Volvo XC40 Pure Electric
    Her car: MY22 Skoda Octavia Limited Edition Wagon

  8. #8
    Join Date
    May 2008
    Location
    Mindarie, Perth (WA)
    Posts
    1,472
    Users Country Flag
    Quote Originally Posted by Zoza View Post
    I've never owned a car with that many miles on it... My usual turnaround for cars is always around ~3 years even though I tell myself (or get told by the wife) that this is it, I'm keeping this car until it breaks down.
    fair enough. But what you're now saying is that you have no real proof that your particular run in style is successful or not (and I'm not saying it isn't). Just that you need to have the runs on the board (or kms on the clock) to back your statement up.

    We had a Mazda6 (owned from new) which I put 290,00kms on it. No engine rebuild, only timing belts changed at the prescribed 100k kms intervals. Normal services etc. I reckon that speaks for my run in style. Vary the rpm, vary the load, always increasing both with distance.

    So to answer your first post in this thread....I don't believe that driving the vehicle in "D" mode will cause harm to it (provided you continue to vary the revs and the load)
    Last edited by FJ Steve; 24-03-2011 at 01:39 PM.
    MY16 Touareg 4.2Lt V8 TDI/Pure White LED lightbox/REDARC Brake Controller/ Racechip/iDrive Throttle controller
    2008 GOLF .:R32/5DR DBPE DSG/SUNROOF/RNS510/PRIVACY TINT/CONTI SC3s/MILLTEK CATBACK NON-RES/9W2 BT/"MYR-032"

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Apr 2010
    Location
    Melbourne
    Posts
    3,874
    Or just push the gear selector to the left and drive in manual mode (using the shifter or paddles to change up/down). If you slow down too much or stop it'll downshift for you.

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Dec 2010
    Location
    Brisbane
    Posts
    46
    Users Country Flag

    Quote Originally Posted by DreamensioN View Post
    I've now got 160,000km on the dial, and the car still makes almost 200rwKW, with no sign of any problems whatsoever.
    That's a pretty impressive result considering that's basically what they came from the factory with. I'm guessing you've serviced it extremely regularly, which always helps.

    Out of curiosity, any mods to it at all? Or is the engine still as the Gods of Nissan intended it?
    Golf R ordered, here before I go old and grey: Expected delivery in August. Maybe.
    Candy White | 3DR | Manual | Sunroof | ACC | MDI | RNS510 | 19" Black Talladegas | Bluetooth
    CURRENT: 1986 BMW E28 535i

Page 1 of 3 123 LastLast

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  
| |