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Definitely some changes in transmission behavior '22 vs '24

Discussion in '5th Gen 4Runners (2010-2024)' started by cuse93, Oct 23, 2024.

  1. Oct 23, 2024 at 5:59 PM
    #1
    cuse93

    cuse93 [OP] Ice Station Zebra

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    I spent 3 yrs in my '22 ORP so I can definitely say that the transmission in my '24 ORP behaves differently.

    Specifically, what I have noticed is a seeming "reluctance" to shift to a higher gear. It seems to hold a lower gear much more persistently than my '22 at even/neutral throttle with no braking. This is happening on both downhill and uphill grades.

    I'm assuming it's purely software/trans-tune related?

    Just curious if anyone else has observed such?
     
  2. Oct 23, 2024 at 7:12 PM
    #2
    Mr.DRZ

    Mr.DRZ New Member

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    I can't speak to any comparison with a '22 but my '24 seems to upshift at the earliest possible opportunity.

    Perhaps something else could be happening? I'm sure you are very familiar with the 4R but just to rule out - it's not in S4 by chance?
     
  3. Oct 23, 2024 at 7:19 PM
    #3
    Lost Woods

    Lost Woods New Member

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    How many miles, because there is some learning involved. Mine had the same hesitation initially but it was gone after a bit.
     
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  4. Oct 23, 2024 at 7:21 PM
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    cuse93

    cuse93 [OP] Ice Station Zebra

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    Really? I didn't think that level of technology/intelligence existed in a 4R. But maybe you are right, mine actually still has less than 100 miles.
     
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  5. Oct 23, 2024 at 7:37 PM
    #5
    whippersnapper02

    whippersnapper02 New Member

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    It learns your driving habits.
     
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  6. Oct 23, 2024 at 7:37 PM
    #6
    icebear

    icebear Recovered Kia Owner

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    Automatic transmissions adjusting their behavior automatically has definitely been a thing for a while, that’s probably the case as mentioned.
     
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  7. Oct 23, 2024 at 7:46 PM
    #7
    Technologic80

    Technologic80 Sexy Member

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    To this day, can't understand what y'all talking about... my '23 shifts fine, even with cruise control on. It doesn't hold gears, downshift, etc.
     
  8. Oct 23, 2024 at 8:06 PM
    #8
    Airdam

    Airdam New Member

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    Shoot man, these ECU will learn and change all sorts of tuning for the engine and trans based on how you drive. It takes at least the second full tank of gas to start seeing the changes. If you beat on the vehicle, like drive aggressively, the trans will shift at higher RPM and have a different timing and fuel map. If you drive like a pawpaw it will change trans shift points, line pressures, timing and fuel tuning to match the lower RPM and less aggressive timing tables. Yes it learns, yes it will change, its quite smart.
     
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  9. Oct 24, 2024 at 4:51 AM
    #9
    scanny

    scanny New Member

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    I had 2010 SR5 for 11 years, then 2022 TRD Off-Road for 2 years and now I got 2024 TRD Off-road since April. Honestly I didn't notice much difference in transmission shifting between all of them. KDSS seems to make ride firmer, that's all : )
     
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  10. Oct 24, 2024 at 7:39 AM
    #10
    HazOpRed

    HazOpRed 22' TRDOR

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    Every vehicle is different
     
  11. Oct 26, 2024 at 7:59 AM
    #11
    McSpazatron

    McSpazatron New Member

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    Yeah, got to give it more than a couple hours of driving time for all the computers to adjust themselves. Once past break-in mileage, drive how you normally drive and it will probably settle into the same transmission behavior you previously saw.

    I’ve never had any weird behavior either. But, it was pretty neat to see how different it behaved when I took mine through colorado. There were a few times on long climbs on the interstate, where I was almost wide open throttle in 4th gear, and it did not shift down into 3rd. It made sense for it to hold 4th, since with the lower power from altitude, 3rd would have probably sucked just as bad lol.

    I don’t live at altitude, so in my usual driving, it will normally kick down into third pretty fast once I start adding throttle.
     
  12. Oct 26, 2024 at 10:43 AM
    #12
    cuse93

    cuse93 [OP] Ice Station Zebra

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    thank you, this is enlightening. I know the technology has been commonplace forever and common in most vehicles, I just never thought it made it's way into our 5th gen dinosaurs
     
  13. Oct 26, 2024 at 2:17 PM
    #13
    McSpazatron

    McSpazatron New Member

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    Even back on my old 99 Accord, I remember it supposedly had “adaptive” programming. I never quite understood it, because I’m used to the idea of me learning the machine, not the other way around. I always figured it would create a feedback loop where it’s undoing what I’m learning about its throttle and transmission response.

    Who knows…the whole adaptive thing probably does eek out some amount of efficiency. I can’t imagine the “learning” algorithms are all that complex though.
     
    icebear likes this.
  14. Oct 28, 2024 at 8:05 AM
    #14
    MEski4x4

    MEski4x4 New Member

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    Not going to lie - I'm pretty damn happy with the transmission in my 24 Pro. It doesn't downshift too early, on some hills it holds OD, and around town it isn't clunky at all. Miles ahead of the transmission in my old Grand Cherokee Hemi.
     
  15. Oct 30, 2024 at 2:22 PM
    #15
    zznalg

    zznalg New Member

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    My 2024 SR5P shifts beautifully, consistently and predictably. Downshifts as I would like almost all the time. I live at 7000 altitude. It has about 12K miles. I'm a long time manual driver and am very particular about auto transmission behavior.
     
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