Toyota Sienna Hesitation

in Toyota
I just bought 2008 Toyota Sienna on February and experienced the hesitation when I tried to accelerate my vehicle after slowing down at the intersection at the speed between 5 to 10 mph. When I stepped on the gas at the speed I mentioned above, the engine seemed to roar up, but my car didn't move, and for a few second later it took off. It is intermittent. I had it serviced at the dealer I bought it from, but did not find any thing wrong. And I've been told by a few people including a service manager at the dealer that it is normal. They kept telling me that the new Toyota Siennas are computerized connecting the gas pad to the fuel injection. Because the signal has to move from the pad to the computer and to the fuel injection, that why a few second delay occured. I'm not a mechanic, but I know enough to understand how the computer works. Yes, there is a delay between touching the keyboard and printing data on the monitor. But as a users or the drivers, the delay should not be noticable. The service manager told me the specialist from Toyota come to dealer once a month and will have them checked my 08 Sienna. I also reported this issue to Toyota customer support. They documented the problem on my car and will set up to have my car checked at the dealer. It've been almost a month already, I have never heard any thing from them.
I just want to know if there are any 08 Toyota Sienna owners out there have experienced the same problem as I do.
I just want to know if there are any 08 Toyota Sienna owners out there have experienced the same problem as I do.
Tagged:
0
Comments
Search/Google for:
wwest dbw hesitation abolition
http://townhall-talk.edmunds.com/direct/view/.f169148/7
That's just my opinion, though.
My guess is that if the '08 owner/driver's can learn to adapt to this new feature the firmware "fix" might be made backwards compatible.
The best answer is probably the one that Ford has chosen for the Edge, a variable displacement ATF pump, but that, most definitely, would not be backwards compatible.
Assume you are accelerating even ever so slightly and accoringly the transaxle is in a lower gear ratio that it would otherwise be at your current roadspeed.
If you now lift the throttle SLOWLY the system will predict that you wish to simply begin cruising along and the trnasaxle will shift into the highest gear appropreate to the current roadspeed.
On the other hand if you lift the gas pedal FAST/QUICKLY the assumption will be that you wish to slow, perhaps using a bit of engine compression braking, and the transaxle will be more likely to remain in the current "lower" gear ratio.
In this latter case, FAST/QUICK release of the gas pedal, and you NOW wish to quickly return to acceleration, there is no gear upshift pending, in process, nor having just completed. So the transaxle is fully "armed"/prepared for even a downshift if that is what is required for the level of acceleration your "new", re-acceleration, gas pedal position dictates.
In about 1998 Toyota/Lexus commited to a major (as it turns out more MAJOR then they predicted) transaxle design change mostly in favor of improved FE. The design change resulted in their transaxle's INABILITY to support two gear changes in quick succession in some situations, mostly if the gas pedal has been released into a position that results in an idling engine or almost so.
To reduce weight, complexity and improve FE the "old" line pressure accumulator was eliminated back in about '98 in order to allow "real-time" control of ATF line pressure. This was primarily the result of the need to provide the extra space needed build more robustness into the Camry transaxle now that it had to serve duty in the upcoming HEAVIER RX300.
But without the accumulator to sustain line pressure the line pressure collapses to near zero with each gear change if/when the engine is idling or nearly so.
Ford has adopted the same ATF "real-time" line pressure control but also adopted a variable displacement ATF oil pump so line pressure recovery can be quick(er) even with the engine idling. That variability also allows them to improve FE to an even greater extend via reducing the pump displacement volume as engine RPM rises.
Ford has a better idea.......sometimes.
Most people just look at the number of ratios in an automatic.
I keep telling them the 4EAT in our 2009 Forester is a whole lot more responsive than the 5 speed auto in our Sienna but noone wants to believe me.
I sense that when I go over a speed bump, I let off the gas slowly, it shifts to 4th I think, then I'm back on the gas and it takes an eternity to figure out it should be back in 2nd, 3rd tops.
So basically the Sienna seeks the tallest gear possible to improve FE but cannot conduct multiple shifts back-to-back without a slight delay between each one.
Sound about right?
Just as in your "speed bump" example.
So can it be fixed then? Is there a TSB for this?
Thanks
John - If you - or anyone - are still following this thread, I'd like to hear how your situation is. Thanks.
I can reproduce it every time I want to in my van with a hard brake followed by heavy throttle so the behavior cannot even be called intermittent. It is however, very driving style dependent- in my normal driving pattern I rarely see it My advice: brake further back, gently and with an even deceleration in anticipation of the stop so the down shift doesn't occur so close to when you want to hit the gas and the problem will go away (as a bonus your passengers will be more comfortable since they won't be jerked around as much.)
http://townhall-talk.edmunds.com/direct/view/.f169148/7#MSG7
The dealer said they can not do anything unless there is a TSB. I am adjusting my driving to anticipate when to lighten the foot on the throttle. Hopefully a bigger transmission issue will not develop in the future. I have been happy with the Toyota Sienna otherwise. How this 08 transmission continues to operate and the service provided by Toyota will determine if we stay a Toyota owner in the future.
I have a 2008 Toyota Sienna that hesitates approx 1 out of 3 times after stopping at a stop sign and then trying to accelerate again. It is a 1 to 2 sec delay. I can hear the rpms rising but there is not an immediate response from the transmission. I have brought this to the dealerships attention and they sat that they can't duplicate the problem.. My response at this point is Yeah.. Right!!!
2012 CAMRY LE has hesitation problem. Been to a dealer two times. Fix lasted 1-2 weeks
write to your BBB or state attorney general and advise them...FYI AG Eric Holder just filed a law suit against Toyoto for the carpet /pedal acceleration problems. I feel this may be the next law suit against Toyota. THEY DO NOT HAVE A FIX FOR THIS SERIOUS HESITATION / ACCELERATION PROBLEM,OTHERWISE IT WOULD NOT BE HESITATING.