Supra generations

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    Supra generations

    The Toyota Supra Community for all Supra generations

    Toyota Supra A90

    Owners of the fifth generation Toyota Supra are thrilled about that car

    Toyota Supra MKIV

    In July 1993, the fourth and so far last generation of the Supra came on the market. Internationally, this type is called " Supra MKIV ".

    Toyota Supra MKIII

    In early 1986, the third generation of the Supra was introduced. It is also the first that has not been marketed with the suffix Celica.

    Celica Supra (MK2)

    The second generation was presented in the fall of 1981 and had a completely independent drive with the new (170 hp) 6-cylinder engines.

    2000GT & Supra MK1

    The first Supra built from spring 1978 to summer 1981 was still offered as a top version of the Celica first in Japan and later in the United States.

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    Carsten Insider
    Ah stimmt ja.
    Manu = Bleib solange im gewählten Gang wie geht.
    Red = Schalte Gänge wenn Motor aus :blush:

    SORRAY :rotwerd:

    Auszug aus mkivsupra.net

    Normal Mode (Overdrive ON, MANU OFF)

    Selecting L will give you 1st gear only
    Selecting 2 will give you 1st and 2nd gear, with normal shift logic applied
    Selecting D will give you 1st, 2nd, 3rd, and 4th gear (overdrive), with normal shift logic applied


    MANU Mode (Overdrive ON, MANU ON)

    Selecting L will give you 1st gear only
    Selecting 2 will give you 2nd gear only
    Selecting D will give you 2nd and 3rd gears only. The box will attempt to stay in 3rd most of the time, but it is possible to kickdown into 2nd if your speed is below 70-75mph. The box will also select 2nd gear if you come to a crawl/stop, and will reselect 3rd using the normal change logic, but the gear changes will be that bit quicker (see below).

    Overdrive has no effect in MANU mode, you'll never get beyond 3rd gear unless you hit the redline, at which point it changes up into overdrive to protect the engine and gearbox. If you engage MANU whilst is overdrive then it will not immediately change down, but waits until there is a need to change down following normal change logic. If you are going faster than 3rd gear can deliver then it will never change down until your speed drops to something deliverable by that gear. This stands, in fact, for any manual gear selection - it won't happen unless the resultant gearchange drops the revs within the available rev range. Banging it into L at 100mph will merely result in an electronic sneer from the box. (Park and Reverse are different matters...)

    MANU makes the transitions between gears faster. The ECTS throttle system cuts back on the throttle during gearchanges, and in MANU mode it cuts back less, therefore making the shifts harsher but losing a bit less acceleration during the gearchange.

    MANU mode does not "hold the gear longer" as it holds the gear indefinitely anyway - it shifts when you make it shift. The exception is when the stick is in D, as described above - the shifting pattern will still follow normal logic, i.e. it depends on throttle position, engine load, and revs as to when it changes gear.


    Overdrive Off Mode

    Selecting L will give you 1st gear only
    Selecting 2 will give you 1st and 2nd gear, with normal shift logic applied
    Selecting D will give you 1st, 2nd, and 3rd gear, with normal shift logic applied

    It will not change gear any faster and will not "stay in gear longer" just because overdrive is off. The autobox will already wind up to the redline if you are at wide open throttle, it knows you want power, that's why it's an 'auto' - you don't need manual intervention from the driver to persuade it to stay in gear.

    Also of note - the gearbox may come out of MANU mode and overdrive Off mode if the gearbox is risking damage by staying in them (i.e. it's overheating).
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