Home > General & Technical (L663) > V8 gear shifts |
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Cheshire110 Member Since: 26 Jul 2013 Location: Cheshire/London Posts: 2753 |
That’s how every automatic I’ve ever driven behaves really…
With a modern auto you really have to think of the throttle pedal as more of a “power” pedal rather than anything simply throttle-connected. More power needs (often quite a bit) more rpm in a petrol engine in particular. That being said exactly how it’s calibrated does make a difference to the feel. Our diesel Land Cruiser 200 revs its nuts off unnecessarily whereas I remember our disco 4 used to always just trickle along in as low a gear as possible pretty much. Haven’t driven a P525 but my p400e defender, when you get the engine engaged is very rev-happy too. I guess Land Rover think that people like the sound of the V8! Cheers, David Land Rovers of all shapes S3 onwards… Daily is a 110 V8. |
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11th Dec 2021 9:37am |
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Herdwick Member Since: 03 Dec 2010 Location: UK Posts: 31 |
Cant say I have noticed it at all, drives just as I would have expected.
(Maybe I am not trying hard enough), just coming up to 1k miles in mine. |
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11th Dec 2021 10:57am |
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lazurus Member Since: 22 Aug 2021 Location: England Posts: 10 |
Yes it’s odd, most cars I have driven the pressure applied to the gas pedal didn’t change the gear change rpm unless a given mode is selected. But in comfort mode I wasn’t expecting it to go “well if you apply quarter peddle I will change at 3000rpm but if you apply full peddle I will change at 7000rpm”. Seems excessively “revvy” to me in a mode that I would have thought to be more relaxed. |
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12th Dec 2021 4:47pm |
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