No hill assist
#13
Yes, there are a few situations where it could come in handy.
I'm just philosophically opposed to having interferences such as this be defaulted-on, on several levels. Insulates the driver further from the detail tasks of controlling the vehicle, introduces nonlinear behavior (car won't drive quite the same all the time), potential in traffic that the guy behind you in an automatic-tranny vehicle won't understand why you're a little slow off the mark at a traffic light, etc.
My wife's Subaru Legacy has HSA (aka "Hill Holder" in Subaru-speak), but it's defaulted-off and switchable on the fly, so I do have a little direct experience with this sort of thing.
Norm
I'm just philosophically opposed to having interferences such as this be defaulted-on, on several levels. Insulates the driver further from the detail tasks of controlling the vehicle, introduces nonlinear behavior (car won't drive quite the same all the time), potential in traffic that the guy behind you in an automatic-tranny vehicle won't understand why you're a little slow off the mark at a traffic light, etc.
My wife's Subaru Legacy has HSA (aka "Hill Holder" in Subaru-speak), but it's defaulted-off and switchable on the fly, so I do have a little direct experience with this sort of thing.
Norm
#14
I've pretty much confirmed that mine is not working... Tried a dozen times yesterday on hills and could not get it to work. My concern is that there could be some issue with the car such as a wheel speed sensor problem...but I don't have a CEL.
#16
I finally got mine to work!
I feel like a fool now, but the system isn't too effective if you have to really try to get it to work. Seems like it works intermittently...but you have to make sure you follow the sequence perfectly. Thank you Norm Peterson for the write up!!
I feel like a fool now, but the system isn't too effective if you have to really try to get it to work. Seems like it works intermittently...but you have to make sure you follow the sequence perfectly. Thank you Norm Peterson for the write up!!
#18
Another nanny dreamed up by the busybodies (who likely only drive automatics) who can't understand that the required three pedals/two feet co-ordination really does come with only a little practice.
Crudely, it's supposed to keep you from rolling back when you're starting from a complete stop going uphill and you have a manual transmission. If you're new to stick-shift cars or live in an extremely busy and hilly region (San Francisco), it can be of some benefit, and there probably are a few other very narrowly defined situations. For the majority of experienced MT drivers most of the time, it has the potential for getting in the way more than it'll actually help. Never mind the bad habit that it teaches.
Norm
Crudely, it's supposed to keep you from rolling back when you're starting from a complete stop going uphill and you have a manual transmission. If you're new to stick-shift cars or live in an extremely busy and hilly region (San Francisco), it can be of some benefit, and there probably are a few other very narrowly defined situations. For the majority of experienced MT drivers most of the time, it has the potential for getting in the way more than it'll actually help. Never mind the bad habit that it teaches.
Norm
Last edited by Norm Peterson; 05-27-2013 at 07:25 PM.
#19
I finally got mine to work!
I feel like a fool now, but the system isn't too effective if you have to really try to get it to work. Seems like it works intermittently...but you have to make sure you follow the sequence perfectly. Thank you Norm Peterson for the write up!!
I feel like a fool now, but the system isn't too effective if you have to really try to get it to work. Seems like it works intermittently...but you have to make sure you follow the sequence perfectly. Thank you Norm Peterson for the write up!!