omniphil wrote:
So lets say your traveling at 45mph with the OD disabled. If you put your foot to the floor does it downshift? I assume that with the OD enabled it would downshift to second and wind the engine up which kinda sucks because this is a torque motor and not a HP motor (Things I hate about automatic

)
I wish the auto tranny wouldn't upshift to 3000+ rpms when you floor it and climb because there isnt any power to be had up there...
Amen brother! Learning to drive this auto diesel has been an interesting road for me. I have never had a vehicle with better roll-on acceleration times at 1/2 to 34/ throttle than at full throttle. The first few times I made the mistake of nailing the throttle I'm surprised I didn't cause accidents. I was trying to pull out into a little hole in traffic and *punch* (pause, pause, pause) *click* WAAAAAHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH!!!!!! And it didn't go any faster. I thought I'd broken something.
Lock out the OD and roll on the throttle in the exact same situation though...WHOOOOSH! Just freakin' gone! Next thing I know I'm hitting the brakes 'cause I'm going 90.
My fiancee drove my truck once and got pulled over about 20 miles down the road. She had no idea she was going 80 in a 55. Told the officer that we had just gotten the truck (I had) and that she had never driven a turbo diesel before (she hadn't) and he steps back a bit, looks left and right, looks back and me and goes, "This is a diesel?" He let us go with a warning. Nice guy. Props to the Maryland State officer that was patrolling Rt13 that day!!
Anyway, I've modified my driving style to suit this truck and my fuel mileage (and happiness quotient) has gone up from 18-20 or so to 25-27. I spend a lot of time trying to lift the front end off the ground with traffic light launches though

so I could probably get better (shrug). If I wanted a fuel miser I'd be driving a Jetta Wagon TDI.
Oh! And everyone take Omniphil's comment about the air distribution knob (for lack of better name) to heart. I got another couple MPG average by turning that thing to dash vent. It doesn't matter where the temp knob is...if the air distribution knob (the one on the left) is on one of the three right-most settings, your AC is running to pull moisture out of the air and sapping your fuel mileage.