Manual Transmission Gear Indicator is Blank
#1
Burning Brakes
Thread Starter
Manual Transmission Gear Indicator is Blank
So the in dash Gear Indicator is Blank when the car is stopped, then shows 1st gear once the car reaches about 4mph. This is an issue as it disables the hill hold feature.
How does your Manual Transmission Gear Indicator work? If you put the transmission in first gear, while stopped does the gear indicator show a 1, or is it blank until you start moving?
Many thanks.
How does your Manual Transmission Gear Indicator work? If you put the transmission in first gear, while stopped does the gear indicator show a 1, or is it blank until you start moving?
Many thanks.
The following users liked this post:
catdog2 (03-17-2022)
#3
It should be blank in neutral only and should show the gear indicator even if the car is not moving, i am just talking logically and dont have a porsche. it does the same in my vette. This enables you to see that the car is in a gear while its stopped to prevent stalling.
#4
Burning Brakes
Thread Starter
It should be blank in neutral only and should show the gear indicator even if the car is not moving, i am just talking logically and dont have a porsche. it does the same in my vette. This enables you to see that the car is in a gear while its stopped to prevent stalling.
#5
I agree that this is how it should work. By not showing the gear with no speed, it is disabling the hill hold function, that requires it to be in first gear in order to work. Thus when I come to a stop on a hill if I was in, say neutral slowing. And then once stopped I place it in first the hill hold function does not work. This does not seem right.
#6
Rennlist Member
I don’t think so. The hold engages only when the car is stopped on a hill and you have your foot on the brake and the car in neutral (clutch not depressed). It won’t engage if you leave it in gear when you’re stopped. That wouldn’t make sense.
https://www.porsche.com/usa/accessor...-holdfunction/
https://www.porsche.com/usa/accessor...-holdfunction/
Last edited by Denny Swift; 03-17-2022 at 11:31 AM.
#7
RL Community Team
Rennlist Member
Rennlist Member
Here is the Drive Off Assist for GT cars. GT cars don’t have the Hold feature.
Unsure what it is for the GTS.
Unsure what it is for the GTS.
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#8
What’s the difference between drive-off assistant and hill hold? I was driving yesterday and on a hill in my Spyder and it worked perfectly. I don’t remember if it indicated gear selection. Agree that it doesn’t make sense that it would show gear until moving because you’re either in neutral or the clutch is depressed when at a standstill.
#9
RL Community Team
Rennlist Member
Rennlist Member
What’s the difference between drive-off assistant and hill hold? I was driving yesterday and on a hill in my Spyder and it worked perfectly. I don’t remember if it indicated gear selection. Agree that it doesn’t make sense that it would show gear until moving because you’re either in neutral or the clutch is depressed when at a standstill.
What GT cars don't have, and lower trims do, is the Hold function -- pushing hard on the brake to initiate Hold.
#10
Rennlist Member
pretty much hill hold is a side-effect (IMHO) of the removal of the mechanical hand brake ... if you remember those!
The following users liked this post:
AlexCeres (03-18-2022)
#12
Rennlist Member
Drive off assist confused me for a while in the Spyder because I was treating it like a normal hill hold car.
Here’s what I mean by “normal hill hold”. You stop on a hill and the hill hold takes over. You can take your foot off the brake and as you start to accelerate, the hill hold releases. Pretty natural dance in most modern cars.
Drive off assist is more of a momentary pause than a hold. You stop on a hill and it kicks in. You take your foot off the brake and then wait a second or two and it lets go. I found that by trying to use hill hold dance I was stalling the car. Wrong rhythm. Now I take my foot off the brake, pause until it starts to release, and drive off smoothly. It doesn’t “hold” for you…it just gives you a second to get ready.
I have no idea why they need to work so differently, but they feel very different in my experience.
Here’s what I mean by “normal hill hold”. You stop on a hill and the hill hold takes over. You can take your foot off the brake and as you start to accelerate, the hill hold releases. Pretty natural dance in most modern cars.
Drive off assist is more of a momentary pause than a hold. You stop on a hill and it kicks in. You take your foot off the brake and then wait a second or two and it lets go. I found that by trying to use hill hold dance I was stalling the car. Wrong rhythm. Now I take my foot off the brake, pause until it starts to release, and drive off smoothly. It doesn’t “hold” for you…it just gives you a second to get ready.
I have no idea why they need to work so differently, but they feel very different in my experience.
#13
Rennlist Member
Drive off assist confused me for a while in the Spyder because I was treating it like a normal hill hold car.
Here’s what I mean by “normal hill hold”. You stop on a hill and the hill hold takes over. You can take your foot off the brake and as you start to accelerate, the hill hold releases. Pretty natural dance in most modern cars.
Drive off assist is more of a momentary pause than a hold. You stop on a hill and it kicks in. You take your foot off the brake and then wait a second or two and it lets go. I found that by trying to use hill hold dance I was stalling the car. Wrong rhythm. Now I take my foot off the brake, pause until it starts to release, and drive off smoothly. It doesn’t “hold” for you…it just gives you a second to get ready.
I have no idea why they need to work so differently, but they feel very different in my experience.
Here’s what I mean by “normal hill hold”. You stop on a hill and the hill hold takes over. You can take your foot off the brake and as you start to accelerate, the hill hold releases. Pretty natural dance in most modern cars.
Drive off assist is more of a momentary pause than a hold. You stop on a hill and it kicks in. You take your foot off the brake and then wait a second or two and it lets go. I found that by trying to use hill hold dance I was stalling the car. Wrong rhythm. Now I take my foot off the brake, pause until it starts to release, and drive off smoothly. It doesn’t “hold” for you…it just gives you a second to get ready.
I have no idea why they need to work so differently, but they feel very different in my experience.
The following 2 users liked this post by Larry Cable:
AlexCeres (03-18-2022),
Jeff Jones (03-17-2022)
#14
Rennlist Member
I originally expected the Spyder to let go as soon as I started to apply gas but it holds for the same amount of time regardless in my testing. Now I just wait for it to start to release and it seems happier.
#15
Rennlist Member
That distinction would make a lot more sense to me than GT and non-GT cars.
I originally expected the Spyder to let go as soon as I started to apply gas but it holds for the same amount of time regardless in my testing. Now I just wait for it to start to release and it seems happier.
I originally expected the Spyder to let go as soon as I started to apply gas but it holds for the same amount of time regardless in my testing. Now I just wait for it to start to release and it seems happier.