Sign In Join 



Mazda5 and mountains

13 messages,  Last post on Aug 23, 2008 at 6:41 AM

You are in the Mazda Mazda5 Forum. Your Host is Karens

What is this discussion about? Mazda MAZDA5, Van


Messages Page 2 of 2
1
2
Prev
Next
Last
Go To Msg #
Search This Discussion

#7 of 13
Re: Mazda5 and mountains [athenasius] by mrbwa1
Jun 30, 2008 (4:53 pm)
Reply

Replying to: athenasius (Jun 29, 2008 11:07 pm)

In the 4AT there is no downshift when braking. The engine does do a good job of holding a lower gear for uphill grades though. For the 5AT, I am thingking if it doesn't shift into 5 downhill, try slipping it to the M gate, shifting to 5 and slipping back to the D gate.
 
As far as RPMs go, a couple things could change the coasting RPM. Once the Torque Converter locks, you will see a drop in RPMs. It may take a few seconds after cresting a hill to lock up. Also, my understanding is that the 5 can cut fuel (noticeable on cruise control especially). If normal cruising at a give speed = 2000 RPM and you see the tach drop to 1000 RPM, it could be the fuel cutting out .
#8 of 13
Re: Mazda5 and mountains [mrbwa1] by bobw3
Jul 13, 2008 (8:15 am)
Reply

Replying to: mrbwa1 (Jun 30, 2008 4:53 pm)

And when you're on a long downhill grade, being in 5th gear at 1000rpm or 4th gear at 2000rpm uses no more gas since the throttle is basically at the idle setting in either case.
#9 of 13
Re: Mazda5 and mountains [bobw3] by maltb
Jul 14, 2008 (7:21 am)
Reply

Replying to: bobw3 (Jul 13, 2008 8:15 am)

"And when you're on a long downhill grade, being in 5th gear at 1000rpm or 4th gear at 2000rpm uses no more gas since the throttle is basically at the idle setting in either case. "
 
That really depends on the % of grade and the engine load. Being that the throttle and fuel management are 100% electronic, you really don't know what position the throttle is in and how much fuel is being supplied to the engine to keep it running smoothly.. Effectively using engine braking does reduce fuel consumption and manufacturers are pursuing this to reduce MPG.
#10 of 13
Re: Mazda5 and mountains [maltb] by bobw3
Jul 14, 2008 (8:05 am)
Reply

Replying to: maltb (Jul 14, 2008 7:21 am)

Even without any hill, if I'm coming up to a redlight and I let off the gas completly to allow engine braking to slow me down, there is no requirement of any combustion in the engine to keep the engine spinning, since it's the forward motion of the car that spins the engine, so that's why I'd think that the engine is at it's lowest throttle setting, unless it has a fuel cutoff setting.
 
But I'd say there's no reason that engine braking would use any more gas than putting a car in neutral and letting it coast, since in both cases both engines are basically ideling.
#11 of 13
Re: Mazda5 and mountains [bobw3] by maltb
Jul 14, 2008 (2:17 pm)
Reply

Replying to: bobw3 (Jul 14, 2008 8:05 am)

I dissagree but until we see a fuel system map or some real time injector pulse data, this one is up in the air.
 
Has anyone hacked their Mazda5 PCM?
#12 of 13
by dean1966
Aug 23, 2008 (6:41 am)
Reply
Took a trip out west this summer, ( milwaukee to mount vernon WA, down through idaho, and back up through yellowstone and home), and went through several mountainous areas.
 
I found my 06 manual shift 5, despite being heavily loaded with about 800 lbs people and gear actually got slightly better milage in the mountains, about 31.5 instead of the 31 I'd been averaging, and zero problems with power.
 In fact, at one point I was " racing " a group of harleys up the cascades doing about 75 mph up the 7% grades, ( 3rd and 4th gears) and the bikes simply did'nt have the power to get around me on the short straights.
  When they finally did get around me on a long straight, ( prob doing 95 mph in the process), they found I was thereafter running up their tailpipes on every corner after as the 5 could get through the corners faster than they could. I still averaged 29 mpg for that tank.
 
It must have ben a bit embaressing for them to have such trouble getting around a obviously heavily loaded minivan.
 
As far as the discussion of fuel cutoff on throttle lift, all modern cars do this already for the purpose of emmisions control. A engines emisions go through the roof in these conditions if the fuel is'nt cut off. I would imagine the fuel mapping shuts off whenever it would be transparent to the driver, like in periods of engine braking over some minimum rpm.

Messages Page 2 of 2
1
2
Prev
Next
Last
Go To Msg #
Search This Discussion
To POST a message, please Sign In.

New? Join Now!

Forum Tools

Please sign in.
Email Address:

Password:

Forgot Password?

Search Forums

Enter Keyword(s)

Advanced Search

Browse by Vehicle



View All Vehicles
Advertisement
Ask the Community
See What People Are Asking

Browse by Board

Browse by Topic


View All Topics

Today's Chats

Advertisement