I suspect the OP is driving a newer Freightliner. The clutch switch design is crap. The switch doesn't actuate till well past the point the clutch starts slipping.
going up a mountain shifting?
Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by zoekatya, May 9, 2014.
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Lepton1 Thanks this.
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Wouldn't watching the road ahead and paying attention to your surroundings get rid of the problem of the cruise control. I mean grades that are steep enough to require you to down-shift don't exactly sneak-up on you. If a driver is watching his gauges / listening to his engine , he knows that he's begging to climb a hill. IMHO...( never did use cruise too much , didn't feel in control) once you see that the truck is begging to pull , you cut the cruise off , and get ready to down shift....you don't wait til it's too late.
Keithdabarber and gpsman Thank this. -
Don't shift going up a grade?????????? Get in a low gear before going up????????????? You use the momentum you have built up on the flat before the grade to start up the hill and down shift as needed until you reach a happy speed with a happy gear for your weight. Why waste momentum/fuel slowing before an uphill grade? Someone is confusing going up verses going down. I agree that a driver should know how to get things back under control if shifting going down, these trucks have been known to jump out of gear and what you gonna do? scream and ride it to the bottom?
Last edited: May 9, 2014
HotH2o, Lepton1, Numb and 1 other person Thank this. -
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Obviously, based on what you're hauling, you might not feel safe running the speed limit down a particular grade but that's something you have to decide on before you start down the hill. Experience will teach that to you.Last edited: May 9, 2014
Tonythetruckerdude Thanks this. -
Downgrade downshifting is an essential skill to skill to have, but avoid the need for. It's best to learn/practice that near the very bottom of grades, traffic permitting.dogcatcher Thanks this. -
One more thing. I think I read a pamphlet about how the newer engines were made to be lugged around at extremely low rpm. Well, I don't see how that will work without cooking your motor. I mean manufacturers brag about their engines and all, but from everything I've seen the EGTs will get so hot that you burn your rings and pistons. And you see them, 3/4 of the way up the mountain, with blue and white smoke pouring out the exhaust. I don't have a new engine, but I imagine that with all the stuff they have between the turbo and the emissions stuff, they should superheat too if you lug them up a long pull.Jasonincincy and thedrifter Thank this. -
Hey 70s_driver, once when coming back from Fla. I took 41 down the backside of Monteagle, 2 lane, that scared me in a car!
70s_driver Thanks this.
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