There has not been a time sence i have had my ex that i have not floor'd it... no joke.ayap888 wrote:Frankly, I have not floor the EX35 to the metal. Due to its raw power, it's just a situation that has not happened yet .. have you done it or not ???
A LSD in my dreams.jmess wrote:The lack of a limited slip combined with the computer nannies makes the EX pretty tame. I find full throttle acceleration above 60 to be slower than what I would have expected.
My shift logic is more then likely like this but is there any way to reset my ex's transmission logic and beat the hell out of the car in order to assure this?SteveTheTech wrote:Great use of Google there Allan. I too would drive as fast as humanly possible on such a road if this magical place existed in my area.
I was driving a customers EX once and could not get this noise to duplicate until I went for a ride with him. We pulled out of the dealer and he proceeded to mash the throttle. To replicate the conditions I had his permission to drive it in the same manner. The problem was resolved and the long term shift logic had adapted to constant full throttle acceleration so the car was indeed pretty quick for what it is.
hehe, you should, it's a nice feelingayap888 wrote:Frankly, I have not floor the EX35 to the metal. Due to its raw power
mcheddadi ... I think that if there's anything more exhilarating than flooring the Ex35 .... it's taking you for a ride in this little hotrod.mcheddadi wrote:LOL!
I need to learn more about this. My car (AWD Journey) is getting unusually low fuel economy 23-24 on long highway stretches. I suspect its been abused during test drives and the fuel trim is set for overly aggressive driving. How do I do the electronic reset? Can my dealership do this?SteveTheTech wrote:There is no way to adjust or reset those values. However; there is an electronic reset for the Longterm Fuel Trim in the ECM and that might have an effect on your shift logic. Disconnecting the battery may work but I doubt it. In the loaner cars at my dealer we frequently reset the self learning to try and make these cars drive slightly slower (IDK why all of our loaner G35s can break loose on the 1-2 shift).
The transmission control module will recognize lighter driving and adjust accordingly. It has a hard stored "economy" mode so light (<1/8) throttle input will incur short shifts and almost full TCC lockup at ~43mph.
FWIW, Apr 2008 issue of C&D listed 2008 EX35 AWD Journey at 4032 lbs.Jon_ wrote:it's a lot harder to make 3500 lbs move 70 - 140 than 0 - 70
I'm guessing that it happens when someone votes in the poll.googleman wrote:Why does this topic keep moving up on the forum page even though there are no new posts?