May 06, 2018, 06:51 AM
Oz_ShadowCVT transmisions? durable or move on?
Aside from Nissan Pathfinders made a couple years ago, I have heard nothing but good things. Our Forester with the CVT has been just fine.
May 06, 2018, 07:30 AM
hairy2dawgI've got 36,000 on my '15 Toyota Corolla, that I baby along, and am able to maintain about 40 mpg avg with city, hwy combo. On long hwy trips, I'm capable of getting around 45 mpg. The CVT has been trouble free so far, & I never really noticed much difference between it & a regular automatic transmission. It does have a slightly different feel to it when you accelerate hard, but not anything that takes getting used to.
May 06, 2018, 10:24 AM
lymanthanks for the replies!
the Civic's and Toyota I drove all did well, not so bad as far as an odd feeling, the Mitsu was like driving a golf cart,
motor wound up for a long while then eventually slowed as it worked thru the 'gears',,, definitely a turn off as far as experience,,,
May 06, 2018, 04:30 PM
jdmb03My wife has a 2015 CR-V and we are very happy with it. Smooth operation. No issues.
May 08, 2018, 04:34 PM
muddle_mannquote:
Originally posted by Birdvol:
What are they and why are they superior?
Thanks
It's all about better MPG than a traditional auto.
May 08, 2018, 04:37 PM
muddle_mannquote:
Originally posted by lyman:
thanks for the replies!
the Civic's and Toyota I drove all did well, not so bad as far as an odd feeling, the Mitsu was like driving a golf cart,
motor wound up for a long while then eventually slowed as it worked thru the 'gears',,, definitely a turn off as far as experience,,,
Some of the early CVTs did drone a bit. One reason they do better on gas is they hold a mid range RPM longer than a traditional trans. So it buzzes along at 4k rpms while you got your foot on the gas trying to speed up.
I drove a 2015 Corolla S with "sport" mode. Manually shifting was very snappy and it did a great job mimicking a traditional auto trans.