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http://www.auto.com/targetnews/articles/Automotive/11_26_2001.reutr-story-N26353572.html
BTW, I do think it's funny -- in a sad kind of way -- that Ford claims that a damaged wheel bearing will only result in a "wobble" in the rear wheels. Am I surprised? Unfortunately not, after owning one of their products.
Meade
The only discrepancy I may suggest is, are you still on the stock tires that came with the car? If your tires are ever so slightly larger, they'll go farther and make the car go faster per turn of the engine. (I'm on my stock Potenzas which are down to the treadwear indicators, so maybe my engine's revving a little faster to go the same speed.)
Hmmm ... This might be an interesting little study here. Tell me what brand and size tires you're using, and how many miles are on them. Let's see if tire wear can equate to a couple of hundred rpms at 70 mph!
Meade
Good luck with your purchase!
Meade: I had my car on cruise control to make sure it stayed exactly on the speed/rpm. It has the OEM Bridgestones.
yooper53: You could paint the steel wheels silver with Krylon spray paint. Easy to do when they are off the car. Use newspapers and masking tape to cover the tires. Allow to dry overnight. Or look for aftermarket wheel covers are parts/supply stores. Maybe find a set that uses the lug nuts to hold them on the way Civic covers do.
fowler3
Meade
http://www.eaa.org/communications/eaanews/ford_partner.html
If this is Greek to you, just go about your business.
mdaffron "Mazda Protege 4" Jul 20, 2000 3:59pm
Now, assuming I wasn't drunk either then or last night, then maybe we CAN conclude that tire circumference can play a big role in rpms/mph! At the time of that post, my Protege was scarcely a month old with brand-new stock tires. Now, 28,000 miles later, those same tires are still on the car but are worn to the treadwear indicators -- meaning they're probably about 3/4-inch smaller in circumference. Now, I'm no math wizard, but I am smart enough to figure that a tire with a smaller circumference is going to go a shorter distance in one turn than a larger one, therefore, my engine now has to spin faster to go the same distance at the same speed!
Is my logic correct? And for extra credit, would that affect my rpms at 70 mph by as much as 200 to 250 rpms?
No matter what, I will DEFINITELY take note of my rpms at 70 mph just before I put on my new Yokos in a month or two, and then take another reading after they're installed. Should make an interesting little study!
Meade
We'll have to compare notes on the Yokos after you get them. They seem to match pretty well with what I am looking for and the reviews seemed pretty positive.
Maybe it's not that our engines are running at different speeds -- maybe the stock tachs aren't the highly accurate instruments we're believing they are! Maybe just good for reference only -- still an interesting dilemma, however.
Meade
I did notice something weird though. I changed to synthetic oil at 7500 miles, and the rpms at 70 mph went from 3000 to 3100. I thought that to be strange, with synthetic oil to be the only difference.
On the synthetic note, I couldn't tell any difference between regular and synthetic oil and dyno in the engine. No quieter or better fuel economy, in my opinion. I hope the new owner puts in synthetic like I did, but bet they won't.
check this out: http://www.clubsask.com/
We've received an average amount of snow and ice so far. The dunlops seem to handle decently on the ice, (actually a lot better than I would have thought.) I now have synth in my P5 and notice the cold starts to be quite a bit better (a lot less engine noise while running for the first few minutes). I guess I will really test that tommorow morning, it's supposed to hit -28C with the wind chill tonight.
R
As far as potholes go, I've been in Mtl this summer and I can honestly tell you I got a sore throat from swearing at how bad the roads are. Haven't been to Regina yet, but I'm not sure you can rival Mtl with road "quality". The local gov't didn;t have $ to pay for fixing the potholes, so they spray-painted a circle around them so motorists at least could avoid them. How's that for public finding?
Dinu~
-Larry
;-)
OK everyone, I think I had a real case of the brain farts the other day -- or I WAS actually drunk when I looked at my odometer the other night. (Hey, it WAS a long day.) I checked again last night and this morning, and here are the REAL figures for my 2000 ES 5-speed:
60 mph: 2950 rpm
65 mph: 3200 rpm
70 mph: 3450 rpm
Sorry for the confusion. I think these fall more in line with other 1999 and 2000 ES 5-speed owners.
BTW Paul, changing your oil will have NO effect on your engine rpms. Gears don't magically change size with a different lubricant. Nothing you can do to your car, other than going into your gearbox and swapping out the stock gears for gears of a different size, is going to change what speed your engine revs at a certain mph (other than shifting up or down a gear).
Meade
:-}
-Larry
mdaffron@the-rma.org
Meade
P.S. BTW Larry, when did you move to Germany?
My manual says nothing about this. It only says to turn on the AC when defrosting. No mention of it doing it automatically. This is in the manual for my '02 P5.
Now you can make an argument for the Defrost settings, but why Feet Only?
I looked and it wasn't in the manual. Jeez. (GRIN)
5980 of 6133 Fowler,... by protegextwo Nov 17, 2001 (06:27 am)
Jim, both sets of my Grand Parents spoke Penna. Dutch. My brothers and I are in the process of tracing our heritage thru our family tree. Turns out, as we expected our heritage is Penna Dutch German. Our forefathers left Germany and moved to the settlement of Fleetwood Pa. in and around 1835. Just flying the German flag to celebrate my heritage. I will resume with "old Glory" soon, however!
-Larry
(You can stop the background fife music now.)
Meade
Boy, they think of everything at Mazda!
-Meade
Meade,I respect your opinion, nonetheless, I disagree with your premis, my good friend. IMHO, the flag you fly, the religion you worship, etc. are not relevant to your patriotism. Just my 2 cents, but than again my wife tells me; I know nothing! :-)
-Larry
So I'll drop it. (Guess I have to anyway -- I'm sure Pat already has zeroed in on this infraction of Town Hall on-topic etiquette!!!)
Back to Proteges! How's yours doing since it got -- er -- "tired?"
Meade
-Larry
love my country and my Protege!!! Now lets talk about Mazda Protege's!
-Larry
In my 95 (just thought I'd mention it), Mazda didn't sumb anything down - you are free to use all combinations of the recirc, defrost and AC modes, with every directional setting of the fan.
On a side note, my rear defroster (or atleast the instrument panel indicator for it) doesn't seem to be working any more. It flickers sometime, and I can't tell for sure if the heating element wires running through the rear windshiled are doing their job. I'll check, and if they aren't - any suggestions on how I should open either the panelling in the dashboard or near the windshield to take a look at the wiring and confirm its all fine? How important/effective is the rear defrost anyway - wouldn't having the AC on, the heat high and blowing on face or face-feet defrost all interior surfaces anyway? Does the rear defrost exist to help with snow OUTSIDE the rear window?
Hmm, I just remembered that I installed a CD changer back there some time ago, perhaps I jarred something loose then, and didn't notice until I used the rear defrost switch when it (finally!) snowed last weekend.
-Larry
Meade: I agree with you and yet I don't. The problem is that there really is precious little "American Culture." With the exception of Native Americans, everyone here came from somewhere else and brought with them food, language, religion, culture. America is such a diverse nation and I like to think that without our diversity, we'd be a much more boring place. On the other hand, it would sure be nice if people would emphasize being American over being . It doesn't bother me that people wish to preserve their national heritage after moving to America but it DOES bother me when people fail to acknowledge that they are living in America now and not wherever they came from. I fully expect any American to understand the language and law of the land as well as the freedoms and responsibilities of being an American. It bothers me when I'm working in Chicagoland, USA and someone gets angry at me for not speaking Spanish. I don't suffer from typical American syndrome - I'm bilingual, but Spanish isn't one of them. It bothers me when my dad goes into WalMart and the cashier doesn't know what to do with a $20 bill because it's the old kind from before the redesign. It bothers me when someone in El Paso, TX flies several Mexican flags and not a single American one at their house. But that is their right, and the beauty of our American system.
As for my Protege5, I was hoping to take it out in the snow today after seeing some flurries last night but in all, we only got a tenth of an inch and it was all gone before noon. Probably the most snow we'll see all year - the price one pays for living in the desert
Yet, it wasn't all that bad either? Come on you guys can guess. Now remember, $105.00 for a week car rental over Thanksgiving in South Florida?
-Larry
It was a great trip and, now, I fully understand why you guys like stiff suspension. My '01 Pro LX 2.0L goes around mountain hairpin curves like it's on rails. No bouncing, no bumps, no leaning in curves, and always well above the safe posted speed for the curve. (Other cars)
The trip involved 10 hours driving time, 14 hours total time out. And here's the surprise, with the A/T it got 36mpg! Average speeds 55mph to 62mph. Hey, those were very twisty mountain roads with reverse camber on many of them. Reverse camber is when they are banked the wrong way.
One nasty one was a 90-degree turn at the bottom of a very steep, straight downhill grade. Flashing amber lights on warning signs for truckers not to exceed 40mph, big signs with graphics showing trucks turning over. I was so busy going around that curve I couldn't afford to glance at the tach or speedo.
It's on these kinds of roads that FWD shines. Don't brake. Hold what you have, and at the apex (halfway point of the curve) give it more gas so the FWD pulls the car through the curve and out. Passed most everything else on the road. Zoom!
By the way, that seatcover shop that was going to make a lumbar cushion for me ( est. $65) never called. I took an old, small pillow, and bought a foam pad for it. Cut the foam to 11-inches square. It worked perfectly for my trip, NO back pain at last! Cost $7.19.
Now for some sleep. Got six hours sleep last night and it's now 18 hours later. I'm bushed. Glad I don't make many business trips.
fowler3
-Larry
Well, I got home, took in some stuff from my trunk, and when I came back out to the car, the cause of the problem was staring me flat (pun intended) in the face! My rear left Poortenza was FLAT as a PANCAKE!!!
I had my first fun experience with my donut spare. Actually the tire change went quite fast -- I had the whole thing done in about five minutes. Then I was off to my tire dealer, where I was charged $8 for the repair of not one, but TWO nails! Now, a question ... How do TWO nails get by your front tire, only to impale your rear tire?! (Actually, I guess the front tire kicks 'em up from laying on the pavement just in time for the rear tire to take on the duty of pincushion.)
Oh well. Those Yokos are looking MUCH more attractive today.
BTW, a few hundred posts ago I was raving about the durability of TOYO tires. I was astounded to see that my donut spare was a TOYO! (You'da thunk since the rest of the tires on the car are Bridgestones that Bridgestone would've worked out a deal with Mazda to provide the temp spare too. Oh well! I feel I've got a first-rate temporary spare, fwiw!!!)
Meade
By the way, I left out all the stops I made on the trip. When it's a long drive, I make frequent stops which turns it into a mini-vacation, sort of.
Stopped for breakfast. Stopped to buy homemade banana bread for Christmas, two loafs. Stopped for dinner at a great place where you can eat all you want for $7.50. I had roast beef, chicken and dumplings, pasta salad, 3 vegetables, wonderful breads, and two desserts: banana pudding and chocolate cake. Yummm. Would you beleive I'm losing weight?
fowler3