Parking on a slope

Smartbear said:
wonkydonkey said:
skelters said:
Park it in reverse gear with the handbrake on obviously.
First gear has a higher ratio than reverse, so your car is more likely to roll down a hill if you leave it in reverse rather than in first. Just a little FYI :thumbsup:

It’s the opposite way round, it’s easier to push a car along in a higher gear than a lower one :thumbsup:
Rob
A gear ratio is calculated by dividing the output by the input. A low gear (e.g. first gear) has a high ratio, a high gear (e.g. sixth gear) has a low ratio. Reverse gear is pretty much always a lower ratio than first gear, and so it will be easier for the car to roll in reverse gear.
 
enzed4 said:
wonkydonkey said:
skelters said:
Park it in reverse gear with the handbrake on obviously.
First gear has a higher ratio than reverse, so your car is more likely to roll down a hill if you leave it in reverse rather than in first. Just a little FYI :thumbsup:
Are you saying the car can roll forward when in reverse gear? I didn't think that was possible :?
It can, yes. Our engines are capable of rotating in either direction :)
 
The AA and RAC recommend that when parking a car facing down a hill that the wheels are turned towards the kerb and that reverse gear is selected.

The same advice is recommended in the highway code too.

What do they know though eh!
 
[ref]skelters[/ref] I'm not saying you have to choose between engineering fact and advice published by motoring bodies. The decision is all yours :thumbsup:
 
wonkydonkey said:
[ref]skelters[/ref] I'm not saying you have to choose between engineering fact and advice published by motoring bodies. The decision is all yours :thumbsup:

I've been driving for about 30 years and this is the first I've ever heard of parking in 1st gear when facing down a hill.

But the self proclaimed, "experts" on here know better than the motoring bodies! :rofl:
 
This is why I loved my old Nokia 3310.
Leave the car in neutral and wedge that behind the wheel.
Car ain't going nowhere :rofl:
 
skelters said:
wonkydonkey said:
[ref]skelters[/ref] I'm not saying you have to choose between engineering fact and advice published by motoring bodies. The decision is all yours :thumbsup:

I've been driving for about 30 years and this is the first I've ever heard of parking in 1st gear when facing down a hill.

But the self proclaimed, "experts" on here know better than the motoring bodies! :rofl:
I've spoken to plenty of guys who have been driving for decades who furiously state that all wheel stud/wheel bolt threads should be greased as well, because it's what they've always done and what they've always been told to do. They dismiss explanations of the risk of shearing them off due to excessive preloading because it's different to what their dad said. Old habits are often a good rule of thumb, but that doesn't mean that they are superior to facts :)
 
sars said:
buzyg said:
sars said:
Completely unrelated, in Germany it’s a legal requirement to have the wheels pointed into the kerb when parking on a hill :tumbleweed:
Scarey lot. :lol:

For too sensible and pragmatic those Jerry's. :wink:


I had some German colleagues visiting and one noticed a car parked on a hill, facing down hill (thanks enzed), with the wheels pointed away from the kerb and he was horrified, to the extent that it was like I’d asked him to choose which child :!:
 
wonkydonkey said:
skelters said:
wonkydonkey said:
[ref]skelters[/ref] I'm not saying you have to choose between engineering fact and advice published by motoring bodies. The decision is all yours :thumbsup:

I've been driving for about 30 years and this is the first I've ever heard of parking in 1st gear when facing down a hill.

But the self proclaimed, "experts" on here know better than the motoring bodies! :rofl:
I've spoken to plenty of guys who have been driving for decades who furiously state that all wheel stud/wheel bolt threads should be greased as well, because it's what they've always done and what they've always been told to do. They dismiss explanations of the risk of shearing them off due to excessive preloading because it's different to what their dad said. Old habits are often a good rule of thumb, but that doesn't mean that they are superior to facts :)

Not arguing, it’s just that statement is a little rich, I was taught to put the car in gear when on an incline because back in the day handbrakes were pretty crap and unreliable (think Morris marina). Handbrakes are very much less likely to fail these days than thirty or forty years ago in the same way that nuts on modern vehicles are corrosion resistant.
 
sars said:
Not arguing, it’s just that statement is a little rich, I was taught to put the car in gear when on an incline because back in the day handbrakes were pretty crap and unreliable (think Morris marina). Handbrakes are very much less likely to fail these days than thirty or forty years ago in the same way that nuts on modern vehicles are corrosion resistant.
Leaving a car in gear is certainly a good way to reduce the risk of it rolling away. I agree with that. I think some debate has sparked up because I pointed out that first gear has a higher ratio than any other gear in most gearboxes (including our Z4s), which makes first gear the best gear to resist the pull of gravity if you've parked on a slope :)
 
wonkydonkey said:
sars said:
Not arguing, it’s just that statement is a little rich, I was taught to put the car in gear when on an incline because back in the day handbrakes were pretty crap and unreliable (think Morris marina). Handbrakes are very much less likely to fail these days than thirty or forty years ago in the same way that nuts on modern vehicles are corrosion resistant.
Leaving a car in gear is certainly a good way to reduce the risk of it rolling away. I agree with that. I think some debate has sparked up because I pointed out that first gear has a higher ratio than any other gear in most gearboxes (including our Z4s), which makes first gear the best gear to resist the pull of gravity if you've parked on a slope :)

It’s my fault, i confused your statement with high/low gears and ignored the ratio bit :oops:
Rob
 
Smartbear said:
It’s my fault, i confused your statement with high/low gears and ignored the ratio bit :oops:
Rob
I was a lecturer in motorsport engineering at one point in my career. Gear ratios and crown wheel pinion ratios would inevitably trip a few people up in the room on any one day...including me every now and then! Easily done :thumbsup:
 
wonkydonkey said:
Smartbear said:
It’s my fault, i confused your statement with high/low gears and ignored the ratio bit :oops:
Rob
I was a lecturer in motorsport engineering at one point in my career. Gear ratios and crown wheel pinion ratios would inevitably trip a few people up in the room on any one day...including me every now and then! Easily done :thumbsup:
I still can't get my head around the idea that a car is more likely to roll down hill (facing down hill, not facing up the hill) when in reverse gear than in first gear. Learn something every day :lol: . Does that mean, by the same token, it would be easier to push a car backwards in 6th gear than it would in 1st gear (because 6th is a lower ratio than 1st)?
 
enzed4 said:
Does that mean, by the same token, it would be easier to push a car backwards in 6th gear than it would in 1st gear (because 6th is a lower ratio than 1st)?
Yep! Try it on your car :D With the engine off and the car on the level, stick it in sixth gear and you'll be able to nudge the car backwards or forwards fairly easily.

FYI the ratios are listed online as 4.35 (first gear) and 3.93 (reverse gear), so there's about a 10% difference between them.
 
I've found a light-hearted chat about it. The ending cracked me up :lol:

https://www.cartalk.com/content/will-putting-vehicle-reverse-guarantee-it-wont-roll-down-hill
 
wonkydonkey said:
enzed4 said:
Does that mean, by the same token, it would be easier to push a car backwards in 6th gear than it would in 1st gear (because 6th is a lower ratio than 1st)?
Yep! Try it on your car :D With the engine off and the car on the level, stick it in sixth gear and you'll be able to nudge the car backwards or forwards fairly easily.

FYI the ratios are listed online as 4.35 (first gear) and 3.93 (reverse gear), so there's about a 10% difference between them.
Can't test that with my DCT but I'll take your word for it :D
 
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