Transmission: Sport+ vs everything else
Sports was the same as comfort with poor shifting.
Anyone else notice this?
Sports was the same as comfort with poor shifting.
Anyone else notice this?
That ain't right!




”Anything below S+ seems to have been designed for 80+ year old with the reflexes of a sloth.”
I mean, seriously? In 2023?
Last edited by Peter; Jun 13, 2023 at 10:25 PM.
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Lets start with the inarguably broken, which would be the shifting. This car has easily reproducible shifting problems. An example: When going up a steep hill it downshifts with a bang. I mean a hard, no one intended it to happen, bang. The sort that sounds like something might break. I can reproduce this on every hill on the way up to the city house. I rent a lot of cars as I'm coming and going out of town and a few of those will also have shifts that wouldln't be described as smooth, but nothing like this car. We're talking about Honda, Toyota, Mazda, whatever cheap rental Enterprise gives me to take to the airport and get back home in. Torque converter lock up is very poor and easily perceptible, this can also hit with a bang which is unusual enough I've never encountered it. I can go on but IMO this transmission is not well sorted and easily bested by pretty much anything I get into that might even remotely be considered a competitor. Consider this; the PDK in the Panamera shifts vastly faster than this car does if you wish it, very fast, very firm, but it never bangs. Put it in normal mode and it isnt' as smooth, it's significantly smoother. And it's a dual-clutch, you know, the transmissions that are supposed to be all thumbs.
The steering... Try leaving everything else in comfort and putting the steering in sport in the individual mode. What you're going to find is that it's still one finger. Not figuratively, literally. You are still completely isolated from road feel, realistically almost any feel at all. It does one thing though, at least you can tell that the steering wheel is in some fashion connected to wheels. In comfort only time and experience can tell you how much turn you need to turn the steering wheel to get the car pointed some other direction. One last thing here. I was there, back in the day, with those Lincolns, Caddies, etc. At that time, something said by no one was, "I hope this steering is still here in 50 years." I don't know where to go with this one; I readily admit it's probably just me but I simply do not understand why you would want both zero effort and zero feel. I get why zero effort would be desirable in this car, zero feel, not so much, because you can still have isolation with feel.
The throttle; again probably me, But...I don't believe for one second this car is smoother due to the throttle. Chauffeur mode and all that? Nope, no buying it. If you have to learn how to drive smoothly, if it takes practice, there is something up. I can get into almost any car and drive it smoothly in terms of throttle input in a few blocks; this one you have to learn how to work around it to get anything done. Let's you want to leave a stop sign at an ordinary, even stately, pace? You have to feed in a lot of peddle, back out of it before it downshifts in an unseemly way (remember that poor trans shift tuning) then as it gathers speed you feed back in throttle. None of this is doing some fancy maneuvering; this is just leaving a stop. Of course you can give it a little throttle and wait an interminable period for something to happen and eventually it does; but not before the other guy decided you must want him to go first, or one of the cars behind you stands on their horn, or you get shot by an irate Uber driver. Next time you drive this car, pay attention to what you're actually doing with the throttle; the car taught you to do that, you had to learn it. Why is it wrong? Because you can get into one of those rental cars I was talking about and make a smooth roll away from a stop without doing anything but gently pushing on the throttle. Gunfire avoided.

I do like this car, it's quite a splendid place to pass time, but I think it could be better at what it does if it was better tuned. I've become accustomed to it just like everyone else but I'd submit that isn't really the best answer: You could probably become accustomed to being raped in prison every morning; that doesn't make it right.
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Lets start with the inarguably broken, which would be the shifting. This car has easily reproducible shifting problems. An example: When going up a steep hill it downshifts with a bang. I mean a hard, no one intended it to happen, bang. The sort that sounds like something might break. I can reproduce this on every hill on the way up to the city house. I rent a lot of cars as I'm coming and going out of town and a few of those will also have shifts that wouldln't be described as smooth, but nothing like this car. We're talking about Honda, Toyota, Mazda, whatever cheap rental Enterprise gives me to take to the airport and get back home in. Torque converter lock up is very poor and easily perceptible, this can also hit with a bang which is unusual enough I've never encountered it. I can go on but IMO this transmission is not well sorted and easily bested by pretty much anything I get into that might even remotely be considered a competitor. Consider this; the PDK in the Panamera shifts vastly faster than this car does if you wish it, very fast, very firm, but it never bangs. Put it in normal mode and it isnt' as smooth, it's significantly smoother. And it's a dual-clutch, you know, the transmissions that are supposed to be all thumbs.
The steering... Try leaving everything else in comfort and putting the steering in sport in the individual mode. What you're going to find is that it's still one finger. Not figuratively, literally. You are still completely isolated from road feel, realistically almost any feel at all. It does one thing though, at least you can tell that the steering wheel is in some fashion connected to wheels. In comfort only time and experience can tell you how much turn you need to turn the steering wheel to get the car pointed some other direction. One last thing here. I was there, back in the day, with those Lincolns, Caddies, etc. At that time, something said by no one was, "I hope this steering is still here in 50 years." I don't know where to go with this one; I readily admit it's probably just me but I simply do not understand why you would want both zero effort and zero feel. I get why zero effort would be desirable in this car, zero feel, not so much, because you can still have isolation with feel.
The throttle; again probably me, But...I don't believe for one second this car is smoother due to the throttle. Chauffeur mode and all that? Nope, no buying it. If you have to learn how to drive smoothly, if it takes practice, there is something up. I can get into almost any car and drive it smoothly in terms of throttle input in a few blocks; this one you have to learn how to work around it to get anything done. Let's you want to leave a stop sign at an ordinary, even stately, pace? You have to feed in a lot of peddle, back out of it before it downshifts in an unseemly way (remember that poor trans shift tuning) then as it gathers speed you feed back in throttle. None of this is doing some fancy maneuvering; this is just leaving a stop. Of course you can give it a little throttle and wait an interminable period for something to happen and eventually it does; but not before the other guy decided you must want him to go first, or one of the cars behind you stands on their horn, or you get shot by an irate Uber driver. Next time you drive this car, pay attention to what you're actually doing with the throttle; the car taught you to do that, you had to learn it. Why is it wrong? Because you can get into one of those rental cars I was talking about and make a smooth roll away from a stop without doing anything but gently pushing on the throttle. Gunfire avoided.

I do like this car, it's quite a splendid place to pass time, but I think it could be better at what it does if it was better tuned. I've become accustomed to it just like everyone else but I'd submit that isn't really the best answer: You could probably become accustomed to being raped in prison every morning; that doesn't make it right.






