T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1282.1 | Not with a bargepole | STRIKR::LINDLEY | Strewth mate..... | Mon Nov 05 1990 11:26 | 7 |
| They are, according to a road safety survey done in sweden, the most
unsafe car in their class in terms of injuries/deaths in road
accidents. The safest in its class was the Nova, which was between 2
and 5 times safer, depending on the type of accident.
John
|
1282.2 | Don't buy one | IOSG::MARSHALL | Waterloo Sunset | Mon Nov 05 1990 11:54 | 4 |
| Get a VW Polo, much nicer if you want a comfy small car and aren't worried
about performance.
Scott
|
1282.3 | | NSDC::SIMPSON | Two faced commit | Mon Nov 05 1990 12:41 | 2 |
| Be but bear in mind that the new Polo has just come out in mainland Europe -
so expect depreciation on the old model if you buy one.
|
1282.4 | Doctor, am i mad? | RUTILE::BISHOP | | Mon Nov 05 1990 13:33 | 13 |
| Ok so you've had some bad comments, now for some good ones...
When i drove the plain bog standard `Collette' i found it very comfy,
quiet, and fairly nippy for its size.
It was a real pleasure to drive (maybe thats why all the learner cars
are Micra's), the clutch is easy, overall the viewing area is good,
and very easy to get used to... its the kind of car you can get into
and feel at home in after 5 minutes...
All in all, i actually liked it... perfect for traffic driving 0etc...
Lewis.
|
1282.5 | Another vote for the Micra | IJSAPL::CAMERON | I rode on the roads in Rhodes | Mon Nov 05 1990 13:52 | 17 |
|
Well I think the Micra is pretty good value for money. My girlfriend's
Micra is four years old and has, in the main, been subjected to short
journeys and a lot of stop/start town driving. As we all know, this
is general, is not particularly good for the car, but the Micra has
never let us down in the four years weve had it. This is more than
I can say for my last three or four cars I've owned, but that's another
story.
All in all it's a very good town/short journey car. The steering's light
,excellent all round vision, easy gear change and, from our experience,
reliable. As a matter of interest I was talking to an ANWB man ( the
Dutch RAC/AA ) and they rate these as one of the most reliable cars in
their class.
Gordon
|
1282.6 | Try one ! | CHEST::CLIFFE | Earth ?? Where in the Galaxy is that ?? | Mon Nov 05 1990 13:58 | 18 |
|
Micra Collete :- my wife has been driving one for 4 years now,
she likes :-
goodpoints :- easy to drive,
light steering,
easy clutch,
nothing complicated about it,
great for town driving, very nippy.
will cruise at 70+ (with some noise !)
badpoints :- radio with one speaker (we got another installed with
two speakers)
Clutch went after 28,000 miles (99% of driving about town, and a little
complaint about her driving habits !)
|
1282.7 | Another few words | IOSG::MARSHALL | Waterloo Sunset | Mon Nov 05 1990 15:04 | 11 |
| The "Colette" isn't the base model, it's the mid-range one.
Possibly the most unpleasant thing about a Micra is Nissan salesman and their
fake offers of cheap prices. But as you're buying s/hand privately you won't
get that.
The car has a very different feel to it than European cars; I'm told it's
"just typical Japanese"; you either like it or you don't." I don't, but then
I don't like Trabants either...
Scott
|
1282.8 | Micra yes! | YUPPY::HYTCHD | | Wed Nov 14 1990 12:34 | 9 |
| Another vote in favour. My wife had an automatic Micra,
for several years and for use about town found it ideal.
Plenty of vision, good space inside for kids and dogs, very reliable,
cheap to run(mpg etc), wide doors to get in and out of and although the
boot is not big it has a low sill for lifting heavy bags more easily.
I drove it a bit and although not a hotrod was more than adequate for
the purpose. Depreciation was average.
More room and more comfortable than polo,metro,fiesta in the same price
range.
|
1282.9 | Stick with Diesel | UKCSSE::PARKERD | | Wed Nov 14 1990 15:58 | 12 |
|
Pug 205 Diesel?
Never yet seen a rusty one and they go back to 1983.
55-60 mpg on the smelly stuff
More comfortable than Fiesta, Polo, Old Metro etc
Looks good
But.......Expensive.
Just a thought
Dave
|
1282.10 | | SYSTEM::GOODWIN | AH! But WHO excorcises the excorcist? | Fri Nov 16 1990 16:07 | 5 |
| Re: .8
What was it like selling an Automatic Micra (if you did sell...)?
Pete.
|
1282.11 | sad but necessary | YUPPY::HYTCHD | | Mon Nov 26 1990 23:32 | 2 |
| Very sad; but we got a good price and its since been sold on again and
is still in immac.,2 lady owners condition
|
1282.12 | | SYSTEM::GOODWIN | NOT the DS expert. | Tue Nov 27 1990 13:29 | 4 |
| I'll rephrase my question - how easy was it to sell? Are automatics in
demand?
Pete.
|
1282.13 | | NEARLY::GOODENOUGH | | Tue Nov 27 1990 14:18 | 4 |
| Why shouldn't they be? Currently on my first - I wouldn't go back to
all that gear-shifting and clutch work in traffic jams for anything!
Jeff.
|
1282.14 | yes easy to sell | YUPPY::HYTCHD | | Wed Nov 28 1990 08:51 | 1 |
| yes very easy to "sell". Lots of demand still
|
1282.15 | | SYSTEM::GOODWIN | NOT the DS expert. | Fri Nov 30 1990 13:52 | 4 |
| Oh... I was perhaps under the mistaken impression that small automatics
were difficult to sell!
Pete.
|
1282.16 | | OVAL::SAXBYM | Teenage Ninja Mutant Teutons | Fri Nov 30 1990 14:06 | 9 |
|
SMALL Automatics are easy to sell. My parents had a queue of people
wanting to buy their Metro Automatic and the garage also offered a
good trade in price.
I think bigger autos are harder to get rid off because they are more
common. The trouble is that there are very few SMALL Automatics around.
Mark
|
1282.17 | Less power | MACNAS::JDOOLEY | A Taxing Question | Tue Dec 04 1990 15:53 | 4 |
| The reason being that automatics use up 10% of the engine power for
the shift mechanism.small cars don't have that kind of power reduction
to spare........
|
1282.18 | | VOGON::BALL | Maggie, Maggie, Maggie *IS* out, out, out... | Wed Dec 05 1990 14:50 | 11 |
| Re .prev
Is this right? Sounds bizzarre to me. It doesn't take you 10% of your engine's
power to pull the gear stick about so I don't see how anything like this amount
of energy is required to do an equivalent job automatically.
What I know about gearboxes could be written on the reverse of a transverse
flange collar socket bearing from the 'box of a mini but this just surprises me.
Jon
|
1282.19 | 10% of a 3.5 litre car = 350cc!! | VOGON::KAPPLER | | Wed Dec 05 1990 14:56 | 9 |
| It also sounds illogical from the perspective of engine size. The
amount of power required to shift gears cannot be a percentage of the
engine size. A 2.8 litre Sierra and a 1.6 litre Sierra must surely use
a similar amount of power to shift gears.
If they had said that it was related to car size (weight) I would have
found that more logical.......
JK
|
1282.20 | | FORTY2::QUICK | 17 hands, now that's more like it | Wed Dec 05 1990 15:16 | 8 |
|
Automatics use up engine power through the torque converter
unless I'm very much mistaken. It's not the actual changing
gear that's the problem, it's the simulating the action of
a manual clutch (no doubt someone can explain this better
than me).
Jonathan.
|
1282.21 | Power lost without converter lock-up | CRATE::RUTTER | Rutter the Nutter | Wed Dec 05 1990 15:22 | 7 |
| � Automatics use up engine power through the torque converter
The action of a torque converter introduces a continuous
amount of 'slip' during use. This will lose power all the time,
unless you have 'lock-up' - which is a feature on newer auto-boxes.
J.R.
|
1282.22 | Go impress your neighbours/friends with this :-) | UKCSSE::RDAVIES | I can't trype for nits! | Thu Dec 06 1990 12:11 | 33 |
| The following is for the less mechanically aware.....
a manual system transfers the drive to the gearbox via a 'fibrous'
friction plate sandwiched between two metal plates, the action of
depressing the clutch pedal, parts the metal plates, and disconnects
the torque between the three.
An automatic is actually an automatic gearbox AND an automatic clutch,
two separate items. The 'automatic clutch' is in fact a series of
interlaced discs, alternating between drive feed, and drive takeup,
sitting in a highly viscous fluid. At rest one set of disks is stopped,
with the interleaved disks turning, and providing influence on the
stationary via the fluid. The energy from the drive is dissapated by
the fluid.
As you begin to move, the fluid dissappates less of the energy as it
transfers it from one set of disks to the other. In conventional
systems there's ALWAYS a degree of slip, hence automatics have much
slower acceleration.
As has been mentioned, modern systems provide a means whereby, as the
speeds of both sets of disks match there is a method of locking them
together providing direct drive without slip. This is more efficient,
both for performance and economy. This is normally only done on the top
one or two gears. ( traditionally automatics were 3 speed, low medium,
high, these modern boxes are increasingly 4 speed, akin to manuals
going to 5 speed).
Thus the best spec is 4 speed automatic with partial lockup in 3rd, and
full lockup in top!.
Richard
|
1282.23 | How about benefit of Torque Converter ? | CHEST::RUTTER | Rutter the Nutter | Thu Dec 06 1990 13:51 | 9 |
| � systems there's ALWAYS a degree of slip, hence automatics have much
� slower acceleration.
You didn't mention the other feature of the 'torque converter',
in that in can increase the torque being put out at certain
speed ranges. I know little about this, do you know more
(and explain how this is achieved) ?
J.R.
|
1282.24 | | SUBURB::PARKER | GISSAJOB | Fri Dec 07 1990 15:05 | 7 |
| For those still boggling at how a torque converter mimics a clutch, the
analogy I always use is stirring a bowl of treacle. If you stir it
slowly, you will just move the treacle. The faster you go, the bowl
itself will start to turn, until if you go really fast, the bowl is
turning nearly as fast as the spoon.
Steve
|
1282.25 | CVT: Torque or Transmission... er... | SYSTEM::GOODWIN | NOT the DS expert. | Mon Dec 10 1990 14:00 | 6 |
| What about CVT (Continuously variable torque) as in the Fiat's and Ford
Fiesta's? As I understood it, it used a belt system on a drum that
could change ratios continuosly. Can anyone add anymore detail to this
(woefully inadequate!).
Pete.
|
1282.26 | a DAFt idea now used by Fiat/Ford ? | CRATE::RUTTER | Rutter the Nutter | Mon Dec 10 1990 14:10 | 17 |
| CVT = Continuously Variable Transmission (I believe)
The principle was developed for use by DAF,
which involved 'rubber bands' on cones.
Low gear achieved by belt running on small-diameter,
shifting to larger-diameter as gearing gets 'higher'.
(same as gear ratios in a gearbox)
This should happen such that engine is kept at an
'efficient' rev-band range.
The Ford/Fiat versions use a steel belt (some sort of multi-link
chain?) to achieve the same effect.
I think the person with the patent was a 'van Doone' or van Doorne...
J.R.
|
1282.27 | | SUBURB::PARKER | GISSAJOB | Mon Dec 10 1990 15:01 | 3 |
| CVT still uses a torque converter, and thus suffers some power loss.
Steve
|
1282.28 | DAF(T) allright.. | KIRKTN::LDICKHOFF | | Tue Dec 11 1990 08:36 | 5 |
| Yes, the CVT was developped by DAF (thank God they stopped making those
cars.....).
Cheers,
Flying Dutchman
|
1282.29 | | JANUS::BARKER | Jeremy Barker - T&N/CBN Diag. Eng. - Reading, UK | Tue Dec 11 1990 19:59 | 19 |
| Re: .26
It's Van Doorne.
Re: .27
It does not use a torque converter. The original (DAF-type) version uses a
centrifugal clutch, the newer types a hydraulically operated clutch which
is controlled by the engine speed.
Re: .28
The old DAF-type transmission is still made and used on the Volvo 340.
(BTW, the DAF transmission was successfully used by some Formula 3 cars.)
jb
|
1282.30 | CVT : Dutch belts only | HOO78C::DUINHOVEN | Weird scenes inside the colemine... | Wed Dec 12 1990 12:25 | 10 |
| RE: CVT:
Only the steel belts are made by Van Doorne now.
All the other parts are made either by the car manufacturer or
someone else.
Ford and Fiat are using it in Europe.
Subaru is one of the Japanese versions. (CVT in big capitals on doors)
Dutch Hans
|
1282.31 | CVT | JUNO::WOOD | Scalpel, scissors, replace head ....... | Wed Dec 12 1990 16:25 | 3 |
|
My mate has a volvo with the CVT 'box, and it is strange sitting in it with the
revs at a constant pace, while you know that the car is accelerating.
|
1282.32 | CVT - Variomatic | HOO78C::DUINHOVEN | Weird scenes inside the colemine... | Thu Dec 13 1990 12:34 | 15 |
| More CVT info:
- One of the major differences between CVT and the old Variomatic:
CVT belts PUSH rather than the Variomatic belts pull the driven
shafts.
- Normally there is only one CVT belt in a car; the Variomatic
had two belts.
- Differential gear is after CVT; Variomatic differential gear
was before. (reason = have force divided between two belts;
the belt was the weakest part of the Variomatic system)
It is expected by 1991 models to have a CVT implemented on two litres
engines.
Hans
|
1282.33 | WOW ! What a rathole ! | CHEFS::PALMER | | Wed Feb 06 1991 12:54 | 1 |
| What happened to the original topic ?
|