Hey Gang,
So my daughter is a newer driver. I brought home my Crosstrek a few weeks ago and, because she didn't want to drive our van, I just told her she could drive it, and I would drive the van. I didn't give her a tour of the car, bus assumed since she knew how to drive the old car the new car wouldn't be any different.
She mentioned about a week later that the car was really loud and said it would slow down by itself. I took it out and it sounded fine to me...seemed to brake okay. I didn't know what to make of it. I let her keep driving it. I got into the car with her a week later, and she put the car in manual (M) to drive it. I mentioned to her that she had it in M, and she said "Yeah. that's where I have been putting it." I said "WHAT?, YOU HAVE BEEN DRIVING IN MANUAL THIS WHOLE TIME? HAVE YOU BEEN DRIVING ON THE HIGHWAY? HAVE YOU BEEN SHIFTING?" To which she replied, "What's that?"
So, she was driving the car in M instead of D for weeks. Apparently the computer will not let you redline the car and will automatically shift if you don't, but I tested it today and you need to get up to 5,000-6,000 RPM's before that safety kicks in. Given that she was driving like this for such a long period of time, may she have damaged the car? The car seems to be okay and drives fine. Is there anything else I need to do to? Should I take it in for service?
My daughter now knows that D means drive in all cars, and that is the gear she should be using to drive. I now know that I should not assume that a crazy loud noise coming from a car due to high RPM's is not necessarily alarming to a new driver, even if she has never heard the noise before.
Any advice?
So my daughter is a newer driver. I brought home my Crosstrek a few weeks ago and, because she didn't want to drive our van, I just told her she could drive it, and I would drive the van. I didn't give her a tour of the car, bus assumed since she knew how to drive the old car the new car wouldn't be any different.
She mentioned about a week later that the car was really loud and said it would slow down by itself. I took it out and it sounded fine to me...seemed to brake okay. I didn't know what to make of it. I let her keep driving it. I got into the car with her a week later, and she put the car in manual (M) to drive it. I mentioned to her that she had it in M, and she said "Yeah. that's where I have been putting it." I said "WHAT?, YOU HAVE BEEN DRIVING IN MANUAL THIS WHOLE TIME? HAVE YOU BEEN DRIVING ON THE HIGHWAY? HAVE YOU BEEN SHIFTING?" To which she replied, "What's that?"
So, she was driving the car in M instead of D for weeks. Apparently the computer will not let you redline the car and will automatically shift if you don't, but I tested it today and you need to get up to 5,000-6,000 RPM's before that safety kicks in. Given that she was driving like this for such a long period of time, may she have damaged the car? The car seems to be okay and drives fine. Is there anything else I need to do to? Should I take it in for service?
My daughter now knows that D means drive in all cars, and that is the gear she should be using to drive. I now know that I should not assume that a crazy loud noise coming from a car due to high RPM's is not necessarily alarming to a new driver, even if she has never heard the noise before.
Any advice?