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- Nunya
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- 2.5L Hybrid
toyota seems to generally have this figured out on their eCVTs.
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Yeah, I use brake hold all the time, works great for this issue.Has anyone with the issue used the brake hold? (Switch on the right of the lower console)
When you stop, the truck can't move until you press the skinny pedal.
Tested once - same effect - it just applies more PSI than I do on brake pedal, normally.Has anyone with the issue used the brake hold? (Switch on the right of the lower console)
When you stop, the truck can't move until you press the skinny pedal.
I wonder if they just remove the whole (ETA) chargingtoyota seems to generally have this figured out on their eCVTs.
at least on the Toyota I read there is a clutch to dampen sudden torque. it's not the kind of clutch that can completely disengage or anything - it just smooths things out. the one complaint I read about some toyota eCVTs was a little "shudder" when the engine starts but I haven't found anything describing like what happens on my maverick. The clutch is mentioned in this commonly posted video:I wonder if they just remove the whole regen during open loop time - so no resistance in the generator motor, no need to exactly hit an RPM ratio to cancel out engine torque, with an ICE RPM that's bouncing around.
Or perhaps their open loop time is really incredibly done - not really so open with default values, and smooth engine RPM.
You are intermixing terms.I wonder if they just remove the whole regen during open loop time - so no resistance in the generator motor, no need to exactly hit an RPM ratio to cancel out engine torque, with an ICE RPM that's bouncing around.
Or perhaps their open loop time is really incredibly done - not really so open with default values, and smooth engine RPM.
Maverick has a damper too. You can see it mentioned in Weber videos on the Ford eCVT.at least on the Toyota I read there is a clutch to dampen sudden torque. it's not the kind of clutch that can completely disengage or anything - it just smooths things out. the one complaint I read about some toyota eCVTs was a little "shudder" when the engine starts but I haven't found anything describing like what happens on my maverick. The clutch is mentioned in this commonly posted video:
the good news is that it's rare but to to say it's anything other than a failure or a bug or whatever you want to call it doesn't seem accurate. a poster above actually hit another vehicle because of this. fortunately no damage or injuries but what if that was a kid crossing the street in front of them???
Ya - corrected post.You are intermixing terms.
"Regen" = regenerative braking.
When standing still there is no regen.
But there can be "generating" also known as charging or recharging.
I'm saying we WANT generator resistance on a cold open loop engine.
In mine, I only get the lurching when my battery is 70% "full" and no recharging is allowed.
But I'm always above 28°F.
I suspect the same effect would present itself at lower than 70% if the battery were too cold to recharge, or recharge with any meaningful current.
Even at 20 F - usually within 40 sec of running, the cat was at 1000 and idle RPM was smoother.And when above 50°F ambient the engine / battery / catalyst temperature is hot enough not to matter in 2 minutes.
In the first 2 minutes a lot of people won't have any stoplights or stopsigns.
I've never had that happen, and have frequently driven in lows well below freezing.I remember the first time this happened to me. I looked in my mirror thinking someone just bumped me. Then it continued like aftershocks until it decided to stop. I realized it is this vehicle twitching Whatever this is and the justifications being made for it, it ain't right and it ain't normal. Whatever it is, the most important question should be, is this creating a situation that is causing damage or wear somewhere down the line.