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Honda Fit Transmission Questions

143 messages, Last post on Sep 09, 2009 at 10:42 AM
You are in the Honda Fit Forum. Your Host is pf_flyer
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Replying to: navion (Apr 08, 2006 10:49 pm) |
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Replying to: saintloup (Apr 11, 2006 7:57 am)
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Replying to: honda411 (Apr 19, 2006 11:05 am) |
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Bought the Fit (Sport Automatic) the day it came out. Great car. The only thing I've noticed is that when I let off the throttle the car seems to deaccelerate quickly as if the engine were acting as a brake (something I would associate with a manual transmission). Is this normal? Is it related to the Drive by Wire or Direct Control system? Just wondering if others have noticed.
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Replying to: sophieandleo (May 05, 2006 11:45 am) |
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Replying to: sophieandleo (May 05, 2006 11:45 am) Just my opinion |
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this is in reguards to someone asking about aftermarket cruiser control. i had aftermarket cruise install on my chevy tracker a few years ago. and i will say this i will never buy a car again that doesnt come with cruiser control! i paid $375 for the install of the cruiser control from a chevy garage. it worked for 1 year then broke, They replaced it free under warranty. it works still. but the feel of the device is Low grade. cheap looking plastic that doesnt match the flow of the interior. plus its bulky. I need cruise control on whatever i drive. I even have a form of cruise control on my motorcycle!! lol in the end if you opted for aftermarket cruise control, be prepared to pay for it and do NOT expect it to look good... chris |
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I'll furthermore arkainzeye re: quality of after-market cruise. I got it on my old 87 Toyota Tercel wagon when I bought it new --dealer installed-- for around $200 and it broke after 2 yrs. I didn't look that great either. I have heard that after market cruise is not possible for the base Fit because of the drive by wire throttle. I've been living w/o criuse for 17+ years and have learned how to maintain constant speed with my foot. It is not that hard, you can utilize fuel-saving techniques (coasting in neutral downhill etc. --btw, the Fit has tremendous roll) and you will learn to relax in "the zone" while maintaining psychic connection to the vehicle. Whereas cruise allows you to turn off your brain while the vehicle is still zooming along--can be dangerous, lulls you to complacency, inattention. Yeah, I know long trips are tedious, I live in Texas.
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Replying to: pueo (Sep 27, 2006 7:19 am)
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I guess the cruise control situation hasn't changed? Recently I talked with three dealers about the Fit, it looks almost perfect as a utility vehicle for my computer & network repair business, _Except_ Obviously I don't want the sport package, this will be a work vehicle. But I need cruise control, since many of my service calls involve driving on the freeway for an hour or more. The only other problem was the dealer loading all his cars with "goodies" which I don't want and can't afford. Probably I can find a way around that eventually, but the cruise control problem has me stumped, for the moment. Maybe something will change next year? |
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