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Saluki |
They can spec anything and an engineer somewhere will meet the spec. 6 duty cycles or 600,000 probably have a electric start on that 14 litre diesel too, how the hell can that work :. Every problem quoted can be accounted for... If they choose to. I bought a year early because I'm not convinced they'll choose wisely. I only see 5 stop signs on my commute and I still don't want it. For me it's an absolute waste of my money, my money. ----------The weather is here I wish you were beautiful---------- | |||
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Member |
I recently sold my 2011 Yukon Denali XL and leased a 2018 Lincoln Navigator L (essentially, a fancy Ford Expedition). It has auto start-stop. There's a switch to deactivate the feature, but unfortunately it resets to its default state (on) every time you turn the car off. Honestly, after a few months, I don't even notice it any more. At a brief stop, the engine turns back on the moment my foot starts to lift from the brake pedal (not even OFF the brake - just LESS brake). It's up and running before I can get my foot on the gas. At longer stops, the engine turns back on by itself after a few minutes and doesn't turn back off. If the heater or AC is working hard, the engine doesn't turn off. What has actually taken longer for me to get used to is that when you shift the car out of park, the parking brake stays engaged until you actually hit the gas - if you shift to drive and don't do anything else, the car just sits there. Other than that, I like the Navigator a lot. It has a small-displacement, high-compression engine with twin turbos and puts out more torque and horsepower than my Yukon Denali did (which had the 6.2L V8) while getting significantly better mileage. It's also quieter, rides better, and has more comfortable seats and a better-sounding stereo. | |||
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thin skin can't win |
You can also press on the same little switch you just pulled to set it and it should release the parking break. You only have integrity once. - imprezaguy02 | |||
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Thank you Very little |
Fords have a brake hold button, you can turn this on or off, it doesn't reset, when you come to a stop you can lift your foot off the brake pedal and the car will hold in position until you press the gas. Make sure that's turned off. Yep the Ford doesn't take a while to restart the engine waiting on the gas to be pressed, as soon as you lift lightly off the brake it will start the engine. Also if you come to a stop with the wheels turned it will not stop, so you just have to learn how far to press the brake and not engage the stop/start, or just press the button. My guess is on the EPA it's one of those things not designed to help mileage much in each car, but to reduce the emission of cars sitting at lights, since we have millions of cars every minute stopped at some light or intersection idling and giving off carbon. Single - it's not much, collectively it's quite a bit, JMO it won't change the temp of the earth one iota. | |||
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Member |
The parking brake is engaged automatically when you shift the car to park. You don't have to manually set the parking brake. The issue (which is not actually a problem, just different behavior than I'm used to) is that the parking brake doesn't automatically disengage when you shift out of park - it automatically disengages when you shift out of park and then push the gas pedal. An example is that, in the past, when I've parked on the side of the street, I would always shift to drive, let the car idle forward as I pull away from the curb a bit, then hit the gas and drive off. Now I shift to drive and the car just sits there unless I give it a bit of gas (to automatically release the parking brake) or hit the manual parking brake switch (to manually release the parking brake). It's fine, it's just different.
I'm aware of the brake hold function. That's completely separate from what I'm talking about (and frankly, seems like a really stupid idea - I can easily imagine a distracted driver not quite stopping all the way, expecting brake hold to engage when it doesn't, and inching forward to bump the car in front). The only thing I can think of is that maybe it's for people that are used to driving electric cars that don't idle forward. | |||
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