Correct seating position will ensure that she has good control over the throttle.
Hi, My wife will not drive our 118tsi because it accelerates too quickly from a standing start. She does not have control of the acceleration peddle for a slow even start. She currently drives a 1.4 Kia Rio which I would like to get rid of and only have one car.
Is there anything that can be done to reduce the initial acceleration. We have had the VW for 3 years and she has only driven a couple of times.
The Point is that we only need one car.
I hope some one can help.
Correct seating position will ensure that she has good control over the throttle.
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You can't just mash the accelerator and take off, like you can in a conventional automatic.
You use the accelerator in much the same fashion as you would in a manual car, i.e. feed in a small amount of throttle, wait for the clutches to take up, then feed as much throttle as needed to get up to the required speed. The DSG is, by design, a manual transmission, that shifts automatically.
'07 Transporter 1.9 TDI
'01 Beetle 2.0
Driver education and practice would be the best option
Failing that you could look for one of those electronic throttle control devices that promise to transform your car
They really are snake oil, they are just modifying the throttle settings sent to the ECU
But these devices often provide multiple throttle mappings
A mapping where much less throttle is sent to the ECU at lower throttle positions would help your wife
2012.1 Skoda Octavia VRS DSG Wagon - Carbonio cold air intake and pipe - HPA Motorsports BBK 355mm rotors 6 pot calipers
APR Stage II ECU - APR 3" exhaust down pipe & high flow catalyst
APR/HP Roll bars - Eibach springs and Bilstien shocks
Supaloy lower control arms - Enkei 18*8 Wheels
The MK5 GT TSI had a winter mode button that would start you off in second gear, dulling the acceleration quite a lot.
Is there anything like that down near your shifter?
It's the same as dialling up a bucket-load of revs and stepping off the clutch.
'07 Transporter 1.9 TDI
'01 Beetle 2.0
Yes - we all know that - we are talking about a wife who has little interest and affinity with cars
I know ladies that either can't shut the door or slam it - nothing in between
I can only assume the OP's wife has driven automatics with torque converters for many years and this has taught her to hit the throttle hard
It's also a credit to a basic car that it feels so zippy - the VW TSI/DSG is very practical and effective
2012.1 Skoda Octavia VRS DSG Wagon - Carbonio cold air intake and pipe - HPA Motorsports BBK 355mm rotors 6 pot calipers
APR Stage II ECU - APR 3" exhaust down pipe & high flow catalyst
APR/HP Roll bars - Eibach springs and Bilstien shocks
Supaloy lower control arms - Enkei 18*8 Wheels
This^^^ not trying to be rude but driving properly is an art (much like being good at anything it requires the practicing the correct methods correctly to perfect it).
Used to do so much driver training where people just would not sit properly or just mash the throttle...
My point is that there is no difference driving a torque-convertor auto and a DSG at a basic level.
I understand what the OP was referring to, but you wouldn't get into a 6 cylinder or 8 cylinder auto either and just hit the throttle hard.
If you get something like the 'sprint- booster' to work in reverse that's one solution.
mk VI GTI, manual, reflex silver, basic
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