my personal preference
When I owned a Mk5 2.0 FSI manual, I found it instructive to see when the 2.0 auto gearbox was changing. I got a 2.0FSI auto as a loan car at various times when servicing my Mk5.
Before I drove the auto I was shifting around 2,300rpm, but realised that the auto was letting the engine change around 2,000rpm for most of the shifts.
I then had a ‘rule’ that basically is 10km/h for each gear on level road. So 1st gear max is 10km/h, 2nd is 20km/h etc… so by 60km/h I would be in 6th. For inclines my rule was 15km/h per gearchange. Btw… these speeds are the one on the speedo, not actual speed which is actually lower than the speedo’s reading.
The result is I was shifting probably around 1,900 rpm in the 2.0FSI.
The 7spd DSG on the 118TSI is nearly following this rule… but its aggressive rush to higher gears means under light to moderate acceleration it’s doing around 8km/h per gear change…. So on level road the DSG is in D7 when doing 56km/h! (and realise this is the speedo readout which is higher than actual speed)
I mention the DSG as it’s indicative what VW have programmed as an acceptable compromise between fuel efficiency and not allowing the engine to labour too much.
So I reckon the 1 gear per 10km/h rule isn’t too bad since you’d be doing 6th at 60km/h in top gear
I use the tiptronic majority of the time (ie shift my own gears) and follow this rule (except the DSG won’t let me go to 2nd until at least 15km/h when I’d rather shift at 10km/h) and always shift around 1,900rpm.
This is just my personal opinion on the topic.
Oh, in rpm terms, the DSG is progressively shifting at lower rpms in the higher gears…. Something like 1,900 rpm 1,700rpm, 1,600rpm 1,500rpm 1,400rpm 1,300rpm
Last edited by cktsi; 23-10-2009 at 02:05 PM.
Reason: added rpm equivalents for DSG
Skoda Octavia Mk3
(sold) Golf Mark 6 Comfortline 118
(sold) Golf Mark5 Comfortline Manual 2.0 FSI
Bookmarks