Click here to return to the home page.
Image of a road.
Who's Online Now
9 members (Image, Malcolm T, RichardV6, chanteclair, dogmog, MartinB60, DJ66, CooperMan, Alistair), 255 guests, and 10 robots.
Key: Admin, Global Mod, Mod
Top Posters(30 Days)
John V6 69
DaveW 67
+8Rich 66
Newest Members
4199, GOFFO1965, Joske Vermeule, SBP17, Ulfulf
9,208 Registered Users
Newest Topics
Maybe an MX5
by howard - 23/07/25 04:10 PM
Dashboard Turn Signal Light
by Bob_Price - 23/07/25 03:37 PM
Ozzy Osbourne
by Burgundymog - 22/07/25 08:28 PM
Super Three chain drive conversion
by Alastair - 22/07/25 04:18 PM
M3W - Anyone know this car?
by Biggle - 22/07/25 01:40 PM
S&S X Wedge Engine Gasket Source
by Morgan Dude - 22/07/25 02:13 AM
Supermax sprocket
by Laurens - 21/07/25 08:26 AM
Latest Photos
Motorworld München
Motorworld München
by Oskar, July 20
visit to Classic Remise Düsseldorf
my book
my book
by Oskar, July 20
More Pictures of the MHR Visit
More Pictures of the MHR Visit
by DaveK, July 19
Visit to the Factory- Historic Morgan Group
Forum Statistics
Forums34
Topics48,343
Posts813,021
Members9,208
Most Online1,046
Aug 24th, 2023
Today's Birthdays
RedThree
Previous Thread
Next Thread
Print Thread
Page 39 of 40 1 2 37 38 39 40
Joined: Sep 2009
Posts: 7,342
Likes: 91
Talk Morgan Guru
Offline
Talk Morgan Guru
Joined: Sep 2009
Posts: 7,342
Likes: 91
After all, the question is what one wants to do with the car in the real world. Even my small light 4/4 is too long although the engine still has enough power with 140 HP. But e.g. for hairpin bends in the Alps the first gear is obviously too short, but the second gear is always an idea too long, so i have to make use of the first gear after braking down if i do not want to torture the engine.
Back to the new Plus Four.
I have to try the new Plus Four myself. In theory I would say, it is boring to drive on B roads always in second gear.
But if the new Plus Four is designed to be so long, I might still like to shift gears. I know some modern gasoline turbo engines that are no fun revs up there, they have a clogged sound and they get tougher and tougher. Many have a sweetspot around 3000 to 4500 rpm. Maybe I will shift gears as early as I do with diesel.


'14 4/4 graphite grey
Joined: Jul 2015
Posts: 958
Likes: 1
Talk Morgan Regular
Offline
Talk Morgan Regular
Joined: Jul 2015
Posts: 958
Likes: 1
Originally Posted by Richard Wood
I suppose it depends on your driving style Tim. Certainly there are enough gears and a slick enough gearchange to promote fun driving on country roads. On motorways and dual carriageways though if just cruising at the legal limit in sixth you would be out of the torque band at 1500rpm and there simply wouldn't be enough available to overtake cleanly or compensate for a slight hill. Changing down one or likely two gears would obviously solve the problem but that defeats the point of the outstandingly high top gear ratio to allow the published low fuel consumption figures. Indeed one of the reviews does suggest that the sixth gearing is simply there to appease the EU, whereas to my mind a six speed box should provide six practical gears.

I'm well aware of this high gearing issue on my Roadster which also requires a change down from sixth to overtake cleanly on motorways despite having more available torque, particularly at the 2000rpm the legal limit represents. The Plus Four's sixth gear is nearly 30% higher still, has less torque and slightly higher weight!


This is where the auto - would be the better option?
3rd gear on the auto is very similar in terms of revs and mph to 2nd in the manual box.

Changing down a gear on the motorway @ 70mph - to overtake seamlessly is nonsensical (interestingly with my Roadster - you certain don't have to do that) and being in 4th or 5th "just in case" also defeats the objective?

I like the "involvement" a manual gearbox gives to the Morgan driving experience, however, with modern engines (turbo boosted in particular) the auto gearbox - may be the better solution? They work better together?

Auto - you would also have somewhere to put your left foot grin2


Honesty means doing it right, even when no one is looking!

2004 Roadster S1 3.0 V6 gone!

Mark
Joined: Apr 2008
Posts: 11,861
Likes: 137
Scruffy Oik
Member of the Inner Circle
Offline
Scruffy Oik
Member of the Inner Circle
Joined: Apr 2008
Posts: 11,861
Likes: 137
Originally Posted by Clipper
Should have bought at the bottom Tim


The problem is that (a) I have no clue at all what the bottom is or how to spot it, and (b) no clue at all as to what to buy if I were to.

These days I am so risk averse I've got out of anything even remotely volatile apart from some Prudential shares that I've been sat on for 30 years.


Tim H.
1986 4/4 VVTi Sport, 2002 LR Defender, 2022 Mini Cooper SE
MDS61 #642130 04/06/20 08:24 AM
Joined: Feb 2016
Posts: 7,922
Likes: 217
Talk Morgan Guru
Online NoMood
Talk Morgan Guru
Joined: Feb 2016
Posts: 7,922
Likes: 217
Originally Posted by MDS61
Originally Posted by Richard Wood
I suppose it depends on your driving style Tim. Certainly there are enough gears and a slick enough gearchange to promote fun driving on country roads. On motorways and dual carriageways though if just cruising at the legal limit in sixth you would be out of the torque band at 1500rpm and there simply wouldn't be enough available to overtake cleanly or compensate for a slight hill. Changing down one or likely two gears would obviously solve the problem but that defeats the point of the outstandingly high top gear ratio to allow the published low fuel consumption figures. Indeed one of the reviews does suggest that the sixth gearing is simply there to appease the EU, whereas to my mind a six speed box should provide six practical gears.

I'm well aware of this high gearing issue on my Roadster which also requires a change down from sixth to overtake cleanly on motorways despite having more available torque, particularly at the 2000rpm the legal limit represents. The Plus Four's sixth gear is nearly 30% higher still, has less torque and slightly higher weight!


This is where the auto - would be the better option?
3rd gear on the auto is very similar in terms of revs and mph to 2nd in the manual box.

Changing down a gear on the motorway @ 70mph - to overtake seamlessly is nonsensical (interestingly with my Roadster - you certain don't have to do that) and being in 4th or 5th "just in case" also defeats the objective?

I like the "involvement" a manual gearbox gives to the Morgan driving experience, however, with modern engines (turbo boosted in particular) the auto gearbox - may be the better solution? They work better together?

Auto - you would also have somewhere to put your left foot grin2

Totally agree Mark, and yes the high gearing in sixth on my car and ironically ridiculously low first seems to be just a Mustang engined Roadster issue.


Richard

2018 Roadster 3.7
1966 Land Rover S2a 88
2024 Royal Enfield Guerrilla 450
1945 Guzzi Airone
MDS61 #642132 04/06/20 08:36 AM
Joined: Apr 2008
Posts: 11,861
Likes: 137
Scruffy Oik
Member of the Inner Circle
Offline
Scruffy Oik
Member of the Inner Circle
Joined: Apr 2008
Posts: 11,861
Likes: 137
Originally Posted by MDS61

Changing down a gear on the motorway @ 70mph - to overtake seamlessly is nonsensical (interestingly with my Roadster - you certain don't have to do that) and being in 4th or 5th "just in case" also defeats the objective?


I suppose it must also depend on what one feels the 'objective' is? The way I see it, a manual gearbox is a torque selection device, allowing you to choose the appropriate amount of torque available for the situation in which one is driving. Thus each gear should have (in theory) a set of circumstances for which it is best suited, and if those circumstances change then the gear selection should also change to suit those new circumstances. Hence to go from low-revs cruising to moderate revs acceleration one would expect to change gear, and the more acceleration/revs one wanted the bigger the change - so 6 to 4 when one wants a big burst on the motorway for example seems entirely right and proper to me. My see my 4/4's 5 speeds as:

1. Pulling away
2. Trickling through town
3. Max acceleration, B road fun, A road overtaking
4. Moderate acceleration, A road cruising, Motorway overtaking
5. Motorways and dual carriageway steady state, general bimbling

I'd quite like a 6th gear to drop the revs down another 500rpm or so at 70mph, but I'm used to it now after 20 years

My old man could never get his head around this concept, his thinking was that the gearbox existed solely to allow him to progress until he got into top gear, at which point he expected to leave it there without ever changing gear again until he came to a stop.

But you're absolutely right, it could well be that the automatic version is better suited to many people's driving styles and would give a much better driving experience. And as for the 'ugly' auto selector? I'd just put a tweed sock over it if it really bothered me that much :-)


Tim H.
1986 4/4 VVTi Sport, 2002 LR Defender, 2022 Mini Cooper SE
Joined: Jul 2015
Posts: 958
Likes: 1
Talk Morgan Regular
Offline
Talk Morgan Regular
Joined: Jul 2015
Posts: 958
Likes: 1
Originally Posted by Hamwich
Originally Posted by MDS61

Changing down a gear on the motorway @ 70mph - to overtake seamlessly is nonsensical (interestingly with my Roadster - you certain don't have to do that) and being in 4th or 5th "just in case" also defeats the objective?


I suppose it must also depend on what one feels the 'objective' is? The way I see it, a manual gearbox is a torque selection device, allowing you to choose the appropriate amount of torque available for the situation in which one is driving. Thus each gear should have (in theory) a set of circumstances for which it is best suited, and if those circumstances change then the gear selection should also change to suit those new circumstances. Hence to go from low-revs cruising to moderate revs acceleration one would expect to change gear, and the more acceleration/revs one wanted the bigger the change - so 6 to 4 when one wants a big burst on the motorway for example seems entirely right and proper to me. My see my 4/4's 5 speeds as:

1. Pulling away
2. Trickling through town
3. Max acceleration, B road fun, A road overtaking
4. Moderate acceleration, A road cruising, Motorway overtaking
5. Motorways and dual carriageway steady state, general bimbling

I'd quite like a 6th gear to drop the revs down another 500rpm or so at 70mph, but I'm used to it now after 20 years

My old man could never get his head around this concept, his thinking was that the gearbox existed solely to allow him to progress until he got into top gear, at which point he expected to leave it there without ever changing gear again until he came to a stop.

But you're absolutely right, it could well be that the automatic version is better suited to many people's driving styles and would give a much better driving experience. And as for the 'ugly' auto selector? I'd just put a tweed sock over it if it really bothered me that much :-)


Tim, I can hear my Dad (no longer with us) saying the same thing "get into "top gear" and keep it there! scared


Honesty means doing it right, even when no one is looking!

2004 Roadster S1 3.0 V6 gone!

Mark
Joined: Mar 2012
Posts: 4,491
Likes: 65
Part of the Furniture
Offline
Part of the Furniture
Joined: Mar 2012
Posts: 4,491
Likes: 65
Originally Posted by Hamwich
Originally Posted by Clipper
Should have bought at the bottom Tim


The problem is that (a) I have no clue at all what the bottom is or how to spot it, and (b) no clue at all as to what to buy if I were to.




Neither do most fund managers to be fair which is why they can't beat the index!

Cheaper to buy a copy of the FT - pin it to the wall at the share pages and then hire a monkey to throw darts at it.

Anyway - back to gear ratios!


2021 Lapis Blue Plus 6 evil You know it makes sense! thinking
2016 Carmine Red 991.2 C4S





Joined: Dec 2009
Posts: 35,776
Likes: 468
Tricky Dicky
Member of the Inner Circle
Offline
Tricky Dicky
Member of the Inner Circle
Joined: Dec 2009
Posts: 35,776
Likes: 468

Reading this just makes me realise what an absolute joy it is to own a car that will take off from standstill in 4th gear and just keep on delivering power all the way through, not a recommended practise before the clutch police arrive..

I'm really done with revving frantic things..


2009 4/4 Henrietta
1999 Indigo Blue +8
2009 4/4 Sport Green prev
1993 Connaught Green +8 prev





Joined: Jul 2019
Posts: 4,607
Likes: 193
L
Part of the Furniture
Offline
Part of the Furniture
L
Joined: Jul 2019
Posts: 4,607
Likes: 193
Originally Posted by +8Rich

Reading this just makes me realise what an absolute joy it is to own a car that will take off from standstill in 4th gear and just keep on delivering power all the way through, not a recommended practise before the clutch police arrive..

I'm really done with revving frantic things..


Mee maw, mee maw, mee maw... Clutch police here.... OH.. it`s a +8, apologies sir, my younger self did not know any better...(-:

Joined: Dec 2009
Posts: 35,776
Likes: 468
Tricky Dicky
Member of the Inner Circle
Offline
Tricky Dicky
Member of the Inner Circle
Joined: Dec 2009
Posts: 35,776
Likes: 468
Originally Posted by Luddite
Originally Posted by +8Rich

Reading this just makes me realise what an absolute joy it is to own a car that will take off from standstill in 4th gear and just keep on delivering power all the way through, not a recommended practise before the clutch police arrive..

I'm really done with revving frantic things..


Mee maw, mee maw, mee maw... Clutch police here.... OH.. it`s a +8, apologies sir, my younger self did not know any better...(-:

I hope that's just a ticket but no points Occifer - I haven't had any of those since 1986 dear boy..


2009 4/4 Henrietta
1999 Indigo Blue +8
2009 4/4 Sport Green prev
1993 Connaught Green +8 prev





Page 39 of 40 1 2 37 38 39 40

Moderated by  TalkMorgan 

Link Copied to Clipboard
Powered by UBB.threads™ PHP Forum Software 7.7.5