Auto - Does leaving it in "D" damage the gearbox?
Discussion
No doubt a bell-end ish question to many, but I've not driven an auto since my old 190E days.
In a modern auto, unless you are actually parking (or going backwards I guess
) is there ever any benefit in taking it out of "D", other [scrooge mcduck]than perhaps making your brake bulbs last a little longer[/scrooge mcduck]?
In a modern auto, unless you are actually parking (or going backwards I guess

I assume you mean when at a standstill at a red light for example. From a technical point of view I doubt it does any harm whatsoever, from a PH point of view someone will be on in a sec to point of that your brake lights being on will permanently blind the person behind, before actually melting their eyeballs out of their skull with the intense brightness 

Putting it in P in traffic is a VERY bad idea - if someone rear ends you you are liable to end up with bits of the parking pawl destroying the box. As for the original question, I don't think it makes much difference really although I have long suspected that sitting on the brakes after stopping encourages disc warping/deposits/wobblyness.
Dave
Dave
I always knock mine into N at the lights - I can't say I always apply the handbrake - sometimes a I do, sometimes I don't. I've never been actually blinded by someones brake lights.
It feels like you are putting less stress on the drivetrain when it's not trying to push against the brakes.
It feels like you are putting less stress on the drivetrain when it's not trying to push against the brakes.
Harry Monk said:
Dimski said:
I always knocked mine into N and applied the parking brake.
Wouldn't knocking it into P have a similar effect?Also going from D to P usually means going through reverse which is alarming for the people behind you.

P is supposed to be the auto equivalent of leaving a manual car in gear (in case the handbrake fails).
i was under the impression it puts load on the torque converter and eventually fries the fluid or damages other components TC components. i'm guessing doing this a lot, or for long periods of time while stationary must warm things up a little seeing as there's no heat dissipation
although, thinking about it, don't auto's have an external cooler? still not much use if it's only passively cooled
although, thinking about it, don't auto's have an external cooler? still not much use if it's only passively cooled
Edited by dylan0451 on Monday 24th January 19:12
Living in a nation where automatic is king, the practice is that the vehicle stays in D until you actually get out of your vehicle. This includes not only traffic lights, but long stints at railway crossings and in traffic jams. We are told that that practice is hard on the transmission and when stationary and for long periods the vehicle should be knocked into N. However, no-one EVER takes their feet of the brakes unless the vehicle is in motion and those of you who have travelled in North America know what I am talking about.
dylan0451 said:
i was under the impression it puts load on the torque converter and eventually fries the fluid or damages other components TC components. i'm guessing doing this a lot, or for long periods of time while stationary must warm things up a little seeing as there's no heat dissipation
although, thinking about it, don't auto's have an external cooler? still not much use if it's only passively cooled
Leaving at idle in park for short times (traffic lights etc) is fine. If you sit there with your foot on the brake and holding the revs at 2500rpm, you are loading the torque converter and heating the oil up - but you wouldn't normally do that, apart from at santpod.although, thinking about it, don't auto's have an external cooler? still not much use if it's only passively cooled
Edited by dylan0451 on Monday 24th January 19:12
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