High rev range healthy?

High rev range healthy?

Author
Discussion

Sporadic

Original Poster:

12 posts

73 months

Tuesday 3rd April 2018
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Hi All

I have had my toyota celica vvti 2002 for a 4 months now and was wondering if anyone had any tips as I have heard that it needs to be over 5000 revs for the power to kick in, but as an example, 3rd gear at 5000 is 60mph ish, bar it using up more petrol being in a lower gear, can it have a wear and tear on the engine? as it is old now and I want it to live for a few more years at least?

sorry for the n00b question but thanks for your replies biggrin

Pericoloso

44,044 posts

164 months

Tuesday 3rd April 2018
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I would expect in 3rd gear at 5000 rpm is considerably more than 60 mph.

Unless your clutch is slipping as per your other thread.

Sporadic

Original Poster:

12 posts

73 months

Tuesday 3rd April 2018
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Thanks for your reply. I guess I need to look into a new clutch kit then. would you recommend any brands in particular?

MrGTI6

3,161 posts

131 months

Tuesday 3rd April 2018
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Pericoloso said:
I would expect in 3rd gear at 5000 rpm is considerably more than 60 mph.

Unless your clutch is slipping as per your other thread.
5000rpm in third at 60mph sounds about the same as my 306, which is a six-speed also. Not sure on the ratios on the Celica, but can't be too dissimilar.


MC Bodge

21,671 posts

176 months

Tuesday 3rd April 2018
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There is a red line for a reason.

If you are not going to use the revs, buy a turbo or V8

Toyoda

1,557 posts

101 months

Tuesday 3rd April 2018
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Is it a regular 140bhp Celica or the 190/t sport?

Sporadic

Original Poster:

12 posts

73 months

Tuesday 3rd April 2018
quotequote all
Hi Guys

It's the 190

MC Bodge

21,671 posts

176 months

Tuesday 3rd April 2018
quotequote all
Sporadic said:
Hi Guys

It's the 190
It will be the 75 if you don't use the revs wink

TommyBuoy

1,269 posts

168 months

Tuesday 3rd April 2018
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Sure that's more likely to be marginally more wear and tear, but if the engine has good compression, doesn't use more oil than normal for the car and there is no blue smoke I've always thought that giving the engine, once warm, a good work out does it good.

Sporadic

Original Poster:

12 posts

73 months

Tuesday 3rd April 2018
quotequote all
MC Bodge said:
Sporadic said:
Hi Guys

It's the 190
It will be the 75 if you don't use the revs wink
Haha I just don't want it put the old fella under too much stress smile

EDLT

15,421 posts

207 months

Tuesday 3rd April 2018
quotequote all
As long as you're not bouncing off the limiter it won't do any damage. You might want to keep a close eye on your oil level though, that engine burns a bit if I remember correctly.

Sporadic

Original Poster:

12 posts

73 months

Tuesday 3rd April 2018
quotequote all
TommyBuoy said:
Sure that's more likely to be marginally more wear and tear, but if the engine has good compression, doesn't use more oil than normal for the car and there is no blue smoke I've always thought that giving the engine, once warm, a good work out does it good.
I'll give it a go. thanks

Sporadic

Original Poster:

12 posts

73 months

Tuesday 3rd April 2018
quotequote all
EDLT said:
As long as you're not bouncing off the limiter it won't do any damage. You might want to keep a close eye on your oil level though, that engine burns a bit if I remember correctly.
Nice one, I'll try sticking between 5-6 just so it's not too much stress

MC Bodge

21,671 posts

176 months

Tuesday 3rd April 2018
quotequote all
Sporadic said:
MC Bodge said:
Sporadic said:
Hi Guys

It's the 190
It will be the 75 if you don't use the revs wink
Haha I just don't want it put the old fella under too much stress smile
With respect, what did you buy a known high revving coupe for?

delta0

2,355 posts

107 months

Tuesday 3rd April 2018
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Sporadic said:
Nice one, I'll try sticking between 5-6 just so it's not too much stress
Whilst it’s good to take the revs up to the top every so often I wouldn’t sit at that rpm for a long time for example when cruising.

MrGTI6

3,161 posts

131 months

Tuesday 3rd April 2018
quotequote all
delta0 said:
Sporadic said:
Nice one, I'll try sticking between 5-6 just so it's not too much stress
Whilst it’s good to take the revs up to the top every so often I wouldn’t sit at that rpm for a long time for example when cruising.
Totally agree with this. In day-to-day driving you'd rarely need to exceed 3000rpm. Only use the power at the top end when you want to (once the water and oil are up to operating temp of course).

Fastdruid

8,651 posts

153 months

Tuesday 3rd April 2018
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I ran my 2l Mk2 Mondeo to ~170k before I sold it... I picked it up at 96k and it got to see >5k every day.

The only reason it wasn't seeing the red line every day is it just made noise over the last 1k with no appreciable additional acceleration so there was little point in it.

It ran just as sweetly when I got rid as when I bought it.

A Toyota OTOH? I'd expect it to reach 300k or so without any grief, just keep the oil changed and it'll be fine.

98elise

26,658 posts

162 months

Tuesday 3rd April 2018
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delta0 said:
Sporadic said:
Nice one, I'll try sticking between 5-6 just so it's not too much stress
Whilst it’s good to take the revs up to the top every so often I wouldn’t sit at that rpm for a long time for example when cruising.
Agreed there is absolutely no point running at high revs when cruising along. You're just burning extra fuel for no benefit.

anonymous-user

55 months

Tuesday 3rd April 2018
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Sporadic said:
bar it using up more petrol being in a lower gear, can it have a wear and tear on the engine?
What wears an engine is "torque" not "revs".

Imagine you're riding a bicycle - which is harder, spinning the pedals quickly in too low a gear or standing up and heaving on the pedals in too high a gear? It's exactly the same inside an engine. Unless you over-rev the engine it will suffer no harm so long as you don't labour it too slowly, especially from a cold start.

By the way, over-rev is almost impossible in a modern car because there will be an electronic rev limiter. However, what can do real damage is "missing a gear". In other words, changing accidentally from 5th to 2nd in a manual car when you intended to select 4th. The engine will over-rev when you release the clutch and may suffer damage. Such incidents are typically logged in the ECU and official dealers may refuse to accept a trade-in for "Approved Used" if the engine has suffered over-rev incidents. I believe Porsche set the limit at 5 over-rev incidents.

Olivera

7,159 posts

240 months

Tuesday 3rd April 2018
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I think it's been mentioned on here before, but the 190 VVTLI engine produces less power and torque on the first cam (before cam change at 6200rpm) than the lesser 140 engine does at the same rpm.

So rev it beyond 6200rpm or your driving the slowest Celica.