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Hello Mr. Kilmer, how is the reliability of the 2nd generation 6f35 and 6f50 transmission in the Lincoln MKZ and/or Fusions? I have a 2016 MKZ that shifts a little bit hard occasionally. It has 80k miles. AWD. All highway miles as I live in the sticks. Thanks for your time. Have a great day! Also, when changing the trans fluid, don’t you have to be concerned about over filling? Due to the expansion of the fluid.
Scotty, you will see that in few more years, Toyota will only offer hybrid in some car like 2021 Sienna, Venza, and the rest models will be 70% hybrid with e-cvt. They are indeed reliable but that's will be the new normal. It already happened in Europe on yaris, corolla, camry, and all Lexus.
they wouldn't phase them out if people bought them.The problem is not many people want a standard. So manufacturers will mostly make what sells the most.
I imagine they will get better and better one day. Maybe even beat DCT in response time and able to keep the car at the best rpm at all time... That's if the EVs don't kill the development of ICE vehicles.
"As time goes on, they seem to be perfecting the CVT transmissions" In other words, the car buying consumers were Honda quality testers. And they paid the bill when the CVTs broke down.
Real world experience: 2018 Civic EX-T (1.5 liter Turbo), bought new. Currently, 94,400 miles, 33.2 mpg. Transmission fluid changed twice. Coolant flushed once. Never redlined. Rarely exceeded 4,000 rpm. Always come to a full stop before shifting from reverse to drive. Always use the electronic parking break before releasing the break pedal when shifting to park. As of Jan 3 2022: No issues, so far.
UPDATE: As of Jan 1 2023, my 2018 Civic EXT with the 1.5 liter, turbo, GDI, CVT has 130,400 trouble-free miles averaging 34.1 mpg. The only parts I’ve replaced to date was the water pump, drive belt, and PCV valve (all maintenance) and the AC condenser (replaced under extended warranty at 120,000 miles). I still change the fluids early....3,800-4,200 mile intervals for the oil/filter and 25,000 mile intervals for the transmission fluid.
He doesn't have a garage he has a storage facility for his junk he'll never throw out. Unfortunately his next of kin is going to have to deal with it. He's kind of a horder.
My previous ride was a 2001 Honda Civic HX with a CVT. I had it for 15-years. No problems and great fuel economy. My current car is a 2016 Honda Accord LX, also with a CVT. Runs fine. If I were to buy a new car in 2021, I think it would be a Hybrid. Either a Prius or Camry.
Just seen i was right the old celica is where it always was and i think always will be out side the garage Well done Scotty true to your word !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
I had one of those Honda Civic HX with the early CVT. Fortunately, mine never gave out and I was delighted by the 42-45 mpg in my all gas engine way back in 2001 when I bought it used. It was a fantastic commuter car! Honda and Toyota make their own CVTs and have refined them well. But I would not buy a car with CVT in any other car.
He's right about if they are designed right, it will last. My 2011 Mitsubishi Lancer has 160k miles and it still runs great! It does whine when it gets hot, but I change the fluid every 35k miles.
I’ve got a 2015 civic exl, I asked honda about my cvt and was told mine has no recall. I think it depends on what trim level of civic you have, when it was built and where it was built. The ones with the recall had weak shafts because of the metallurgy mistake, the hardness of the shafts were weak.
@@sureshsteven8669 depends on the car, CVT aren't really that bad but companies are pairing them with wrong engines. Mitsubishi seem to be really reliable, Nissan are terrible and they both use jatco cvts.
Yes. But in a city with lots of traffic jams the clutch on manual will wear pretty fast as you have to constantly shift between 1st gear and neutral. CVT or classic automatic with torque converter is a better solution for such occasions. I myself drive manual, it's much more fun. But I don't have to deal with traffic jams, just 5-10 mins occasionally when I'm in the town. Otherwise it's open road - manual makes total sense for this. Should I live in the city I'm gonna go for classic automatic or CVT.
@@kombasanpracka Clutch replacement can be a pain. But Scotty told us how to replace them. Stop-and-go traffic sucks for any driving, manual or automatic. If I have to drive in such a scenario for hours in everyday commute, I will consider an automatic, or the mass transit.
@@ShaoyangJia A conventional automatic will do better in traffic than CVT because CVT's are prone to overheat quickly than a conventional automatic. Plus if you want to keep your automatic or CVT to not overheat just put the car in neutral and when traffic starts moving again put it back in drive.
I prefer manual. But I went from 24 miles a gallon with my manual cavalier to 35 with my Corolla cvt. It's hard to justify having a manual with that drastic of fuel economy.
Some companies got it right others didn't. They are not maintenance free. Rule of thumb change oil and filter every 60000 miles. Had two toyotas both saw 250 000 miles with no problems.
Its honestly true in my experience. The absolute best mechanics are usually pretty rough looking and their shop is grimey af and lacking creature comforts.
Yeah, I agree with Scotty about CVTs. When they're made right they last for a while. That's why most scooters, you don't need to change the transmission fluid or anything inside. But yeah since cars are more complicated things end up breaking easily.
Scotty: I have a son, "he drives like a maniac." Considering your acceleration to 50 on what looks like a residential road, I'd say, like father like son. I do like your videos, though.
You can get a whole new comet for pretty cheap honestly 😂 but I believe in the technology if it's designed correctly with extra heavy duty parts I could see it outlasting a conventional automatic transmission with regular fluid changes on small cars like this but trucks and suvs with cvt doesn't sound like a good idea
oh yeah totally, my audi is 17years old with no service history for the last decade. the cvt works just as expected. my buddy has 2009 e class, guess what part decided to stop working? yes the legendary mb gearbox which supposedly can go half a million with no oil changes.
@Phillip Hampton You don't have to completely stop before shifting from whatever gear you're at to first gear. Though I would wait till you are at 8 mph or below before you shift to first gear other wise the transmission will strain itself trying to sync up the its speed to the engine speed.
@Phillip Hampton some manual cars are fussy about going back into 1rst gears gate without a blip to bring the revs into the right range. I think I only one manual car that could do it with blipping but my speed still had be under 8mph. My suggestion is to work on rev matching and also question is it needed to be in 1rst and not using 2nd gear from a roll
I’ve heard horrible stories about CVT transmissions. And Nissan doesn’t build those transmissions right. I’ll keep my manual transmission on my 2020 Versa
And the conclusion I reached from watching this video? Other than avoiding early generation CVTs and pretty much all dual clutch transmissions, I can't tell which transmission he wants us to avoid.
So which Transmission should we stop buying, CVT or DCT? The problem with DCT vs a manual is in a manual you mostly wear the clutch from a standing start, and if you're gentle this can be minimized, for the rest of the shifts you try and match the revs to the gear before letting the clutch out. A DCT doesn't do this as it shifts like an auto, so it doesn't rev match and just drops the clutch into each gear.
I disagree. The DCT does do some rev matching. I had a Focus with DCT and it did. The problem is they have issues with how it actually engages the clutches. If you drive them a little harder in 1st gear the clutches fare much better. Modern CVT is more reliable than DCT though. Dry DCT has been poorly engineered by the industry as a whole.
Got an HRV 2019 with extended bumper to bumper warranty directly from the dealer that covers 100k miles. I will drive it until then for about 6 years then I’ll upgrade it before anything happens 😏 And if anything happens I will just bring it to the dealer and they will fix it as many times as it fails.
I have a 2015 civic with a CVT transmission with 192k miles no problems. It was one of the last of that model year so the issue may have been fixed. Best car.
My sister and I both have a 2010 Mitsubishi Lancer with a Jatco CVT. Sis changed her fluid at 60k (70k now). I changed mine at 32K (only 35K now). I know neither car is high mileage, but both still work fine. Actually, so far both cars have had zero problems of any kind.
Standard transmission is the best transmission. Love automatics, but if your good at driving a stick it's the way to go. Still cool to see the tech we have today, neat.
Scotty, I bought a 2019 Corolla hatchback. Your son is right, it's quick for what it is.. especially considering the gas mileage. I'm probably not as much of a leadfoot as him though. On flat roads, 75mph and lower, I've seen in the high 40s on the freeway! That's older hybrid territory!
Seeing that the vast majority, and I mean VAST, blow out like light bulbs, you're the one giving anecdotal information. Just a little bit of research and you'll actually see what he's talking about. Yours lasting that long doesnt take away the millions of cvts that blow WAY before they should.
Had two 2012 Nissan versas, both had total trans failures before 50k miles. One had two complete failures before 90k miles... Not all cvt are created equal, what kind is yours??
@@llawnmeister1973 Honda fit econobox. I got up to 90k miles without issue; you just need to do regular maintenance, like changing the fluid (which so many people don't do). It was the year where they had a weak shaft that apparently caused premature failures, but again, from that same run, they've gone 250k miles easy. I actually traded it for a manual mainly because the Fit is being discontinued in the US and I wanted to try the manual before it's too late.
The Nissan cvt is not really bad it’s just nobody changes the fluid/filter and does regular maintenance to keep them going then are surprised when they break
We love you Scotty 🙂🙂🙂 thank you Scotty I took your advice and bought a Toyota Highlander, do to the fact I have this Nissan sentra terrible CVT transmission went out ONLY AT 90,000 MILES AND I HAD TO BYE A USED TRANSMISSION TO FIX THE CAR AND EVER SINCE IT ONLY BEEN GIVING ME PROBLEMS I HAD THE CAR IN THE SHOP FOR OVER 6 MONTH ONLY WAS ABLE TO DRIVE IT FOR A YEAR WHEN I BOUGHT IT, IT HAD ONLY 79,000 MILES AND BACK IN DECEMBER 2019 I BOUGHT MYSELF A TOYOTA HIGHLANDER WHICH I NEVER LIKED TOYOTA OR THOUGH THEY WERE REALLY GOOD VEHICLES AS YOU STATED THEN I WENT AND DID MY OWN RESEARCH AND FOUND OUT EVERYTHING YOU SAID IS TRUE TOYOTA ARE THE BEST AND RELIABLE VEHICLES, AND KEED IN MIND I WAS A HONDA AND ACURA OWNER AND THOUGH NOTHING IS BETTER THAN A HONDA UNTIL I JUST BOUGHT A TOYOTA HIGHLANDER 2014 AND NOTICE HOW REALIBLE VEHICLES THEY ARE I BOUGHT IT WITH 147,000 MILES AND IT DRIVES AS NEW I'M SHOCK TO SEE THIS IN A VEHICLE, ALSO I NOTICE THAT IN THE DOMINICAN REPUBLIC THERE ARE LOTS OF OLD TOYOTA FROM THE 80S STILL DRIVING IN THE STREETS AND THEY ARE VEHICLES BEING USED IN THE Most EXTREME WAY IN PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION AND THEY ARE STILL RUNING BUT YOU LOOK FOR HONDA AND THEY ARE JUST TO LITTLE HONDA BEING USED AS A MEAN OF PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION, WITH THAT ANALYSIS I WENT OFF AND BOUTH MY TOYOTA HIGHLANDER AND THE ONLY THING I HAD TO DO I JUST CHANGE THE OILS AND BOUTH THEM NEW TIRES THE FIRST DAY I BOUGHT IT BACK IN DECEMBER 2019 GOODYEARS TIRES AND OIL CHANGE EVERY 5,000 MILES ALSO WORTH SAYING THAT I RAN A CAXFAX REPORT AND I'M THE SECOND OWNER IT CAME FROM CALIFORNIA SOMEWEHRE IN THE COUNTRYSIDE OF CALIFORNIA PEARL WHITE BLACK LEATHER INTERIOR AND THE OWNER EVERY 57,000 MILES TOOK IT TO GET IT CHECKED AND OIL CHANGE WITH 4.5 OR 5 START ON THE CARFAX REPORT, RELIABLE VEHICLE YES IT IS I DROVE IT FROM THE CITY OF SANTO DOMINGO, DOMINICANA REPUBLIC TO SANTIAGO, PUERTO PLATA ON THE SAME DATE TRAVER THEM 3 CITIES THE SAME DATE AND NO ISSUES ALSO TRAVE TO LA ROMANA SAME DATE TRIP AND NOTHING NO ISSUES WITH THE NISSAN SENTRA I WENT AND TRAVED FROM THE CITY OF SANTO DOMINGO TO LA ROMANA AND ON NY WAY BACK THE TRANSMISSION CVT BLEW UP HAD TO TOW THE VEHICLE LATE AT NIGHT 9PM ON A DARK HIGHWAY SCARY STUFF TO THE CAPITAL AND THAT'S WHEN I HAD ENOUGH AND BOUGHT A TOYOTA HIGHLANDER! TOOK YOUR ADVICE AND THEY ARE THE BEST SUV OUT THERE AND REALIBLE THEY SURE ARE, I HAVE 7 YEARS OLD TWINS GIRLS THEY ARE MY LIFE AND THANKS GOD THAT NIGHT WHEN I WAS DRIVING WITH THEM SCARY STUFF TRANSMISSION GO'S OUT IN THE MIDDLE OF THE HIGHWAY LATE AT NIGHT WHERE THE WORST PART THAT THERE ARE THIEF THAT LATE AT NIGHT CAN ROB YOU AND EVEN KILL YOU, MILES FROM HOME AND IN A DARK SECTION OF THE HIGHWAY, I WAS LUCKY TO SEE LURKING AFAR A LIGHT AND LET THE CAR SCROLL AS MUCH AS POSSIBLE AND NOT PRESS THE BREAK SO THE CAR DID NOT COME TO A FULL STOP AND THANS GOD IT WAS A ALMOST A SLIM DOWN HILL WHEN THE TRANSMISSION WENT OUT BAD EXPERIANCE, AM WAITING FOR THE MECHANIC GIVES ME BACK THE CAR NISSAN SENTRA 2014 AND WILL SELL IT RIGHT AWAY AFTER HE FINISHES FIXING IT STAY AWAY FROM NISSAN PERIOD THEY ARE THE WORST VEHICLES NISSAN, INFINITI HORRIBLE EXPERIENCE AND HORRIBLE VEHICLES AM SURE YOU DON'T WANT TO EXPERIANCE THAT NIGHTMARE SPECIALY WITH YOUR KIDS ON IT THANKS GOD I WAS NOT WITH MINES WHICH I TEND TO ALWAYS BE WITH, THANKS GOD I WAS NOT WITH THEM.
I love the CVT on my 2018 Corolla. It has enormous fuel economy on the highway. I have 70 miles commute one way and I can get 43+mpg easy. (45+mpg if I drive super efficiently at 65mph all the time). I save lots of fuel thanks to CVT, it holds rev down even at high speeds. If don’t drive like maniacs, Toyota’s CVTs are great!
I had same car till a week ago. Loved it. Unfortunately it got flooded where I park it at work and insurance company totalled it. So had to run out and buy a new car, got a Nissan Sentra, would of had to order a Corolla and didn't have any other transportation. Sure did like that Corolla. My running average was 36 mpg eith that Corolla.
thats really smart to have an actual gear at low speed, and starting power and the BELT driven CVT at higher speed, lower torque. That makes a lot of sense you want the high stress at take off to be on an actual durable gear, and then once the car is moving the belt driven CVT can handle the lower stress speeds.
I changed the clutch on my 2001 Toyota Corolla @225,000 km. I brought the car used @100,000 km. I only buy manual cars. Can even start when the battery is weak.
Put a clutch in my 81 f700 dump truck, over 15 yrs ago. This truck works year round. In and out the dump hundreds of times a year, stuck in the mud a lot, gotta rock it out. Just drive em easy.
That Honda 5 speed automatic is proven unreliable. You doing a repair to it means that it has issues. If you want quality buy a 2003 Toyota Corolla. Those automatics never have an issue. Those 4 speed automatics from Toyota are simple and reliable. Plus they were avaliable in a manual. A tip is that when you come to a stop put the car in neutral. Then when its time to go put it back in drive. This is for automatics, dual clutch transmissions, and CVT's. You will thank me.
My CVT just went out in my 2015 Civic. I have 261K miles on it. Cost to replace the CVT through Honda is over 7k. I can’t complain though. That’s a lot of miles on it.
I have learned so much from you. You know your stuff. I will say this it seems to me that the cvt is better and long lasting in cars that have small engines 4 cylinder non turbo 120-130 hp and keep up the service.I know a couple of people with a Nissan cube they both have over 150 thousand miles on them and still going strong
Well the Honda accords like mine (2013) are abut 190 hp and they seem to easily make it to 200K without any issues. And it’s not that slow considering, 0-60 in 7.5s is not too shabby for a cvt. As long as you do the proper maintenance, they are a dream
The wife’s CVT in her 2015 Nissan just bit the dust at 97k miles. As a faithful student of Scotty’s, I know he teaches us to stay away from CVT transmissions and Nissans...BTW she had this car before we met so it wasn’t me that failed Scotty, LOL. Anyway, the two cars we’re looking at (Toyota Corolla and Honda Civic...again from Scotty’s recommendations) all seem to come with CVTs now. So I came here to see what Scotty thought about these new ones. I’m relieved to hear that they make them better now. We’re going to go with the civic. I myself have a Camry. I want the opportunity to personally compare the two most recommended makes and see which one holds up better.
Mitsubishi know what they're doing, that's why they extend the life of their models, for a decade or longer sometimes, makes things easy and they get to perfect the cars over time.
Just can't possibly dissipate the immense heat off of those pulleys without frying the rest of the transmission. I've seen the old Jatco's in the Mitsubishi's last 200K and the same trans last 70K. Front tires and the brake pedal pad was always worn on those that failed. Aggressive off and on the accelerator driving kills them.
I have a 2014 subaru forester with a CVT. 115,000 miles and no issues and no maintenance due yet. Still works as it did the day it was driven off the lot.
We have a 2014 forester with 120k (the engine burns oil but that’s beside the point) the cvt is alright but the problem I have is Subaru’s programming, for example we have and Altima corolla and forester of the three I think the Forester cvt is the worst because is huge delay when pressing the gas and how it just takes off while in the corolla and Altima you can slowly accelerate and be just as fast but the forester as soon as you barely press the gas is just goes
i was lucky enough that i bought 2013 Honda civic and it has automatic transmission. i still drive the same care with 300000 km on it and it is still fantastic.
Seems like before the Honda CVT software update my 2014 Civic's acceleration was more lively. Not as much now.. But, on the plus side: my transmission hasn't exploded yet... So far so good, I guess.😆
Mitsubishi seems to have figured out CVTs, on a 2014 Outlander with 117k miles the transmission has been running like day one. They’ve had some software problems with em causing hesitation in 2015-2016 models but for the most part they seem to be doing alright.
I had a 2014 Civic EXL That I recently traded in for a 2017 RAV4 Limited. I never had any transmission issues, and it had 80K on it. That was the greatest little car. It was so smooth and fun to drive. I did have the trans fluid changed every 30K with the Honda fluid.
The Ford Fusion used the Aisin CVT from 2010-12. We never, ever seen one back for CVT issues, and some of them had well over 150K miles on them. The 2013-present day HF-35 CVT on the Fusion.....that's a different story. Quite a few of those crap out around 60-90K. Cost to replace the HF-35 CVT, about $8500.
The 7 year old JATCO in my Altima just turned 100K. Still runs great! My advice: Get a trans temp gauge, if it drifts above 215, slow down. Also, I change my fluid at 26K, 48K, Filter and fluid at 79K, and (after watching Scotty) again did filter and fluid at 85K. Guess that's why its still running? That, and I very seldom put my foot in it.
Thank you sir, for sharing the wonderful insights into Honda s CVT performance over years. In 2012 November, I went for 2012 accord LX model for 19,300$ instead of 2013 for 21300$. Simply because 2013 was moving to CVT and I just did not like the fact that after spending that kind of money I have to be a Guinea pig for Honda. Today after seeing this video, I am happy that I took a good decision. Thanks for sharing information that cab save us lot of hassle and pain in maintaining a car.
We have a 2014 civic lx with a CVT we purchased it new and now has 160,000 trouble free miles . Have changed the fluid in the CVT when it was recommended.
Hi Scotty, I have the i-shift transmission Honda 2006. This is a manual trans. Robotized, there are two actuators controlled by the Computer to change the gears. Sure the clutch wears out like a normal manual transmission. The next thing is the actuators, 2 of them have to be rebuild, but that is no biggy, they are like 400 US for both. They last around 150K miles or they say. I am at 89K miles so I have few years to go yet. But in the UK where these Honda's Civic 8-gen were build, they have it down pretty well and not so expensive. I saw a video were the mechanic said that they will replace the clutch and the actuators, relearn and all in 6 hours. Thanks. Its very nice to drive many years, but that is not a drivers car.
Co-workers 2012 Prius was pushing 400k miles, mostly city from delivering pizza. The only mechanical part he replaced was the brake pads and the battery pack at around 380k. Unfortunately it got wrecked so he got another 2012 Prius. Toyota cvts are bulletproof.
Toyota hybrids use in electronic CVT, instead of belts and pulleys it’s just one planetary gear set with two electric motors, that mimics the behavior of a conventional CVT transmission. They are pretty much indestructible
Most Dual Clutches above 200ft lbs use wet clutches. Also my Porsche PDK has lasted 110,000 miles on the stock clutches. Also replacing them is not hard, slightly harder than a conventional manual. The software to recalibrate the clutches is cheap, VW you can use OBDeleven/ Porsche you can use a Modus or Softtronic.
My dad, brother-in-law, and I drive a 2018 Toyota Camry Hybrid and it’s about to be two years old with about 115,000 miles estimated about 250 miles mon-sat and sometimes Sunday, and she’s had no issues, I’ll keep talking all updated
I absolutely despise cvt transmissions! I've drove a Corolla with a cvt and it always felt like the transmission was slipping. I also drove a Civic with a cvt. The Civic had a "manual" feature and tried it out. When I put it in 1st, the transmission hesitated then went into "first". The other simulated gears were fine it just did not like simulated first. I noticed that you have a Camry TRD parked out on the street in the background.
I tried the sport mode on a 2023 Toyota Camry. It drove fine, and it used the gearstick to shift instead of silly paddles, but it was absolutely nothing like driving an actual manual. There's a certain feel to a manual that you can't emulate!
Passat VW 2.0tdi 140hp 6g DSG, 300kkm works perfect with no one issue. Every 60kkm wet clutches dsg oil changing. My brother has rav4 toyota cvt, it is unable to drive for me, I have got feeling it doesn't accelarate, my friend rav4 as well cvt, one week after guarantie expired cvt dead. Cost 8500Euro. Thank you Mr.Scott for good advice ;)
yep, friend of mine got 400k on hers, and only needed oil changes. I got an 08 gx. i burned the starter out because of the problem where you have to let the idle go down to under 1k on a short start up, because of a computer glitch or it won't start until you crank it like a mother...when it's cold.. so now i' about to swap that out.
The Wife and I just bought a couple new cars in the past couple of months, good deals. Toyota CHR with CVT trasmission, with fixed first gear Subaru Impreza, with Manual Transmission Best of both worlds
What do you think about the CVTs on the Ford Fusion Hybrid? I have a 2018 Fusion Hybrid S and I changed the fluid in it already. Seems to be doing fine so far at 84 K miles.
I have a Nissan CVT. It has 80,000 miles on it and it runs perfectly. I will change the CVT fluid at 60,000 miles intervals. The push chain/belt needs to be sufficient enough to handle the loads. Adding enough ring bands on the push chain or push belt makes all the difference. I believe in CVT.
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scotyy just changed the game again
buy the 94 celica cvt will last forever lol
Hello Mr. Kilmer, how is the reliability of the 2nd generation 6f35 and 6f50 transmission in the Lincoln MKZ and/or Fusions? I have a 2016 MKZ that shifts a little bit hard occasionally. It has 80k miles. AWD. All highway miles as I live in the sticks. Thanks for your time. Have a great day! Also, when changing the trans fluid, don’t you have to be concerned about over filling? Due to the expansion of the fluid.
Scotty, you will see that in few more years, Toyota will only offer hybrid in some car like 2021 Sienna, Venza, and the rest models will be 70% hybrid with e-cvt. They are indeed reliable but that's will be the new normal. It already happened in Europe on yaris, corolla, camry, and all Lexus.
Toyota is using a better rubber band in their cvt transmissions.
"The thing works perfectly fine until it breaks."
-Scotty
Lol
You need to update that to, until it breaks around the corner
-crysler,nissan, kia
he's a reincarnated Yogi Berra!
"Thats just ridiculous " 🤷♂️
"they gooo, until they blowww"
I’m so frustrated Standard Transmissions are being phased out and CVTs aren’t 🤬
It should've been the other way around, why fix if it ain't broken
CVTs sell better.
they wouldn't phase them out if people bought them.The problem is not many people want a standard. So manufacturers will mostly make what sells the most.
I imagine they will get better and better one day. Maybe even beat DCT in response time and able to keep the car at the best rpm at all time... That's if the EVs don't kill the development of ICE vehicles.
its cause Americans cant drive manual, they are too lazy to shift themselves
Scotty once again masterfully conducts an invisible symphony orchestra.
When I look at it from your perspective, you are hilariously correct.
Good one!!!
If you tied his hands, he would be unable to speak.
Italian style
I know-drives ya nuts, don’t it?
Had two toyotas with cvt. Both saw high mileage . No problems whatsoever. Change oil and filter that's it.
If they put a cvt in the corollas, you know Toyota tested it well. I have a 2013 auris it’s all good
"As time goes on, they seem to be perfecting the CVT transmissions" In other words, the car buying consumers were Honda quality testers. And they paid the bill when the CVTs broke down.
Real world experience:
2018 Civic EX-T (1.5 liter Turbo), bought new.
Currently, 94,400 miles, 33.2 mpg.
Transmission fluid changed twice.
Coolant flushed once.
Never redlined. Rarely exceeded 4,000 rpm. Always come to a full stop before shifting from reverse to drive. Always use the electronic parking break before releasing the break pedal when shifting to park.
As of Jan 3 2022: No issues, so far.
People here only want the bad news about cvt to form their opinion of it
nice!
@@keesknees exactly, internet “experts”
@@vincestone5465 it's so frustrating too because cvt's aren't nearly as bad as everyone thinks they are
UPDATE: As of Jan 1 2023, my 2018 Civic EXT with the 1.5 liter, turbo, GDI, CVT has 130,400 trouble-free miles averaging 34.1 mpg. The only parts I’ve replaced to date was the water pump, drive belt, and PCV valve (all maintenance) and the AC condenser (replaced under extended warranty at 120,000 miles). I still change the fluids early....3,800-4,200 mile intervals for the oil/filter and 25,000 mile intervals for the transmission fluid.
Scotty's arch nemesis, the CVT Transmission
Should be yours, too.
Scotty vs. Jatco CVT
*Top 10 Anime Fights*
And Chrysler lol
Should be everyone's ARCH nemesis. CVT is a terrible idea to begin with.
And Fiat
I’m just glad Honda still makes a solid manual transmission.
That should be granted honestly
Agreed. Honda's manual transmission is excellent. Far far better reliability than their auto transmission.
Err a gearbox.
What next? Calling a liquid "Gas"?
😛
@@MrWilliam.Stewart no its a transmission
Should I get a Honda Civic Si? I'm seriously considering it instead of a CVT Civic Touring.
I see that TRD Toyota Camry back there Scotty😌
He just made a vid on it
@@RAYSGT nope, its a cool car and so is the avalon. People just can't accept change.
He doesn't have a garage he has a storage facility for his junk he'll never throw out. Unfortunately his next of kin is going to have to deal with it. He's kind of a horder.
GT86 go drive one, you’ll think otherwise
Goku Kakorot the red car in street you see behind him
My previous ride was a 2001 Honda Civic HX with a CVT. I had it for 15-years. No problems and great fuel economy. My current car is a 2016 Honda Accord LX, also with a CVT. Runs fine.
If I were to buy a new car in 2021, I think it would be a Hybrid. Either a Prius or Camry.
I'm Dead Serious, Stop Buying Nissan cars and start buying 94' Celicas.
Nissans are junk. PERIOD!
A Z More importantly, Renault, Renault, and Renault
Nah i have 2000 xtrail and still fine but the trans are auto 4 speed more better than cvt
@@lordmeme9965 I have 288k miles on my cvt. Its been fine 4 me.
I'll never buy a Nissan again.
Poorly-engineered rattleboxes.
Scotty: 0:02
Me: No thanks, I might blow a head gasket....Its a Dodge 🤔
MrThree1zero hahahahahaha you’re so freaking funny and original lol 😐
Then you need to get a Toyota...
Good one
I laughed way too hard at that.
I did it with my ram hemi and its smokes now 😂😂
My Civic has 78k miles and still runs good. I change the CVT fluid every 20k miles!
He's 100% right I had a CVT fail while driving. Wasn't fun and much more dangerous than how an auto or manual would ever fail.
my cvt on my 1998 primera went out going 80mph up a hill, scary asf not being able to accelerate at all
false. just do your maintenance and theyll last just as long as standard transmissions
@@mojakhahafr, most of these people don't know what maintenance is, and they blame the car instead of themselves😹
I own a 2015 Honda Civic, same color, 62000 miles, runs great.
Just seen i was right the old celica is where it always was and i think always will be out side the garage Well done Scotty true to your word !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
2016 Toyota Corolla S has a CVT w/ 105k and no problems. Haven’t touched it...probably should change the fluid haha. Works great for me!
Got a used 2018 Civic Hatchback CVT a few months ago. Love it so far.
I had one of those Honda Civic HX with the early CVT. Fortunately, mine never gave out and I was delighted by the 42-45 mpg in my all gas engine way back in 2001 when I bought it used. It was a fantastic commuter car! Honda and Toyota make their own CVTs and have refined them well. But I would not buy a car with CVT in any other car.
What happens to it
@@christopherdominguez845 my wife wanted a newer car so we traded it for a newer Civic. But I wanted to keep it.
He's right about if they are designed right, it will last. My 2011 Mitsubishi Lancer has 160k miles and it still runs great! It does whine when it gets hot, but I change the fluid every 35k miles.
I plan to change the fluid and filter every 35k miles also.
I’ve got a 2015 civic exl, I asked honda about my cvt and was told mine has no recall. I think it depends on what trim level of civic you have, when it was built and where it was built. The ones with the recall had weak shafts because of the metallurgy mistake, the hardness of the shafts were weak.
If they were braking, wouldn’t harder metal make them more susceptible to brakes? Wouldn’t they soften the metal instead?
Most things work perfectly fine until they break.
Don T. Smith - which happens 2 weeks after the warranty expires.
A cvt is a p.o.s. fact, not fiction.
Nah
For me, I'd rather have a CVT than a sloppy automatic. Manuals are still good though. But not everyone wants those!
Do the manual 2012 accords have cvt?
The new automatics are very good but a stick is so much more fun
Mercedes manuals are terrible. Should ways have an auto.
LazerLord10@ ur saying that because u haven't seen the problems cvt's gives ya.
@@sureshsteven8669 depends on the car, CVT aren't really that bad but companies are pairing them with wrong engines. Mitsubishi seem to be really reliable, Nissan are terrible and they both use jatco cvts.
For an economy car, I still prefer the 5-speed manual transmission in my 2012 Corolla over anything else.
wut
Manuals are better than CVT's.
Yes. But in a city with lots of traffic jams the clutch on manual will wear pretty fast as you have to constantly shift between 1st gear and neutral. CVT or classic automatic with torque converter is a better solution for such occasions.
I myself drive manual, it's much more fun. But I don't have to deal with traffic jams, just 5-10 mins occasionally when I'm in the town. Otherwise it's open road - manual makes total sense for this.
Should I live in the city I'm gonna go for classic automatic or CVT.
@@kombasanpracka Clutch replacement can be a pain. But Scotty told us how to replace them. Stop-and-go traffic sucks for any driving, manual or automatic. If I have to drive in such a scenario for hours in everyday commute, I will consider an automatic, or the mass transit.
@@ShaoyangJia A conventional automatic will do better in traffic than CVT because CVT's are prone to overheat quickly than a conventional automatic. Plus if you want to keep your automatic or CVT to not overheat just put the car in neutral and when traffic starts moving again put it back in drive.
I’m watching Ozzy Osbourne with the voice of Rod Stewart
Minus the stuttering
I hear Joe Pesci, ha ha.
I'm sticking with my manual transmission.. proven reliable in many ways and means
I've got 7 driving rigs, 3 for winter, 3 for summer, and a small pickup for whenever. All manuals, no slushboxes allowed here. Save the manuals!
I prefer manual. But I went from 24 miles a gallon with my manual cavalier to 35 with my Corolla cvt.
It's hard to justify having a manual with that drastic of fuel economy.
Some companies got it right others didn't. They are not maintenance free. Rule of thumb change oil and filter every 60000 miles. Had two toyotas both saw 250 000 miles with no problems.
So what Scotty wants to tell Cvt is good or not i did not understand as he talks too fast :(
If you buy a cvt get a Toyota they seem to be the most reliable. Otherwise stick to a 4 speed auto or such
Before clicking on your video I was 100% sure it's the CVT
4:24 "Very competent mechanics"
*PERFECT* picture for that comment, Scotty! 😂
Its honestly true in my experience. The absolute best mechanics are usually pretty rough looking and their shop is grimey af and lacking creature comforts.
Yeah, I agree with Scotty about CVTs. When they're made right they last for a while. That's why most scooters, you don't need to change the transmission fluid or anything inside. But yeah since cars are more complicated things end up breaking easily.
The scooter with CVT has the pulling belt type because of the less weight (
Scotty: I have a son, "he drives like a maniac."
Considering your acceleration to 50 on what looks like a residential road, I'd say, like father like son.
I do like your videos, though.
(insert laughing donkey photo)
CVT transmissions are like Comet torque converters. They wear out way too soon.
You can get a whole new comet for pretty cheap honestly 😂 but I believe in the technology if it's designed correctly with extra heavy duty parts I could see it outlasting a conventional automatic transmission with regular fluid changes on small cars like this but trucks and suvs with cvt doesn't sound like a good idea
oh yeah totally, my audi is 17years old with no service history for the last decade. the cvt works just as expected. my buddy has 2009 e class, guess what part decided to stop working? yes the legendary mb gearbox which supposedly can go half a million with no oil changes.
Dainius Damasevicius Do you have an A4?
As soon as I saw transmission the first thing that came to mind was Honda haha. Their MT's are just perfect though
The way he waves his hands all the time, is so funny 😝😝.
mechanic maestro
He admits to this by confessing to STRONG COFFEE.
He must be Italian.
I'm sticking with a manual even if gas mileage wasn't as great now than it was before and I'm a millennial
The Honda Civic can still be bought with a manual AND a non turbocharged engine.
@@GeneralSirDouglasMcA can't get that combo on the hatchback though, missed opportunity
Bought a civic sport with the six speed manual with out turbo Love it
@Phillip Hampton You don't have to completely stop before shifting from whatever gear you're at to first gear. Though I would wait till you are at 8 mph or below before you shift to first gear other wise the transmission will strain itself trying to sync up the its speed to the engine speed.
@Phillip Hampton some manual cars are fussy about going back into 1rst gears gate without a blip to bring the revs into the right range. I think I only one manual car that could do it with blipping but my speed still had be under 8mph. My suggestion is to work on rev matching and also question is it needed to be in 1rst and not using 2nd gear from a roll
I’ve heard horrible stories about CVT transmissions. And Nissan doesn’t build those transmissions right. I’ll keep my manual transmission on my 2020 Versa
Another perfectly ORCHESTRATED clip by the great CONDUCTOR Scotty Kilmer. Keep up the great work 👍
Somebody needs to send him a conductor's baton for Xmas.
And the conclusion I reached from watching this video? Other than avoiding early generation CVTs and pretty much all dual clutch transmissions, I can't tell which transmission he wants us to avoid.
Stop buying cars with a CVT! Stop buying homes with a HOA!
Finally, someone who speaks my language!
3:06 DCTs don't need to have an even number of gears. A lot of them have 7 gears.
I can't believe he doesn't know this. Maybe US spec cars don't have 7 speed DCTs (apart from supercars etc). Because heaps of VWs have 7 speed DCTs.
So which Transmission should we stop buying, CVT or DCT?
The problem with DCT vs a manual is in a manual you mostly wear the clutch from a standing start, and if you're gentle this can be minimized, for the rest of the shifts you try and match the revs to the gear before letting the clutch out. A DCT doesn't do this as it shifts like an auto, so it doesn't rev match and just drops the clutch into each gear.
I disagree. The DCT does do some rev matching. I had a Focus with DCT and it did. The problem is they have issues with how it actually engages the clutches. If you drive them a little harder in 1st gear the clutches fare much better. Modern CVT is more reliable than DCT though. Dry DCT has been poorly engineered by the industry as a whole.
Got an HRV 2019 with extended bumper to bumper warranty directly from the dealer that covers 100k miles. I will drive it until then for about 6 years then I’ll upgrade it before anything happens 😏
And if anything happens I will just bring it to the dealer and they will fix it as many times as it fails.
Thanks Scotty! (Still kind of dubious with regard to CVTs ). Personally I'm leaning towards a manual transmission while you can still get them...
Hear Hear.
I have a 2015 civic with a CVT transmission with 192k miles no problems. It was one of the last of that model year so the issue may have been fixed. Best car.
The Subaru WRX comes with a CVT let that sink in.
Dont and I mean DONT EVER remind us of that 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
My 2017 Lancer has a cvt too lol. Just passed over 10k km so far sweet running thing, no issues.
A DCT and some nicer interior trim would have perfected the WRX as a daily, but it's too much to ask from a brand like subaru
Ikr. It's crazy
Always get the manual version of any car
My sister and I both have a 2010 Mitsubishi Lancer with a Jatco CVT. Sis changed her fluid at 60k (70k now). I changed mine at 32K (only 35K now). I know neither car is high mileage, but both still work fine. Actually, so far both cars have had zero problems of any kind.
The more I watch these and other videos about the new age car, the more I know that the auto industry has lost it's way.
They're handicapped by the EPA and other similar regulators and thus use CVT's and 4cyl engines to meet regulations. No more fun cars.
FCA's new motto, "Works perfectly fine until it breaks" 😂😂
Note to self:
Never buy Scotty's son's car.
Hahahahaaaaa
Hahaha. Good one. Albeit, I'm not sure you can break a Corolla. Those things keep going and going.
Throwing some shade at his son probably after scotty had to fix his car cuz he drive so quik
Standard transmission is the best transmission. Love automatics, but if your good at driving a stick it's the way to go. Still cool to see the tech we have today, neat.
ZF company sold 3.1 million of their 8 speed transmissions in 2017... Heard Scotty say that in 4 different videos in 1 week :P
Love you Scotty
Scotty, I bought a 2019 Corolla hatchback. Your son is right, it's quick for what it is.. especially considering the gas mileage. I'm probably not as much of a leadfoot as him though. On flat roads, 75mph and lower, I've seen in the high 40s on the freeway! That's older hybrid territory!
Scotty's son drives like a maniac. I wonder who he learned that from?
Hey Scotty, any ideas?
Great mechanic and comedian I don’t think it’s possible to watch Scotty’s video’s without laughing 😂😂😂😂
Reminds me of my mum's car.. Nissan Rogue/ X-Trail the CVT blown on 19K kilometers
Lemme guess, bashing CVTs with anecdotes?
...
eeeeeh yup
My daily uses a CVT and nothing wrong. Seen em get up to 250k on the 'problematic' one.
Seeing that the vast majority, and I mean VAST, blow out like light bulbs, you're the one giving anecdotal information. Just a little bit of research and you'll actually see what he's talking about. Yours lasting that long doesnt take away the millions of cvts that blow WAY before they should.
Had two 2012 Nissan versas, both had total trans failures before 50k miles. One had two complete failures before 90k miles... Not all cvt are created equal, what kind is yours??
@@llawnmeister1973 Honda fit econobox. I got up to 90k miles without issue; you just need to do regular maintenance, like changing the fluid (which so many people don't do). It was the year where they had a weak shaft that apparently caused premature failures, but again, from that same run, they've gone 250k miles easy. I actually traded it for a manual mainly because the Fit is being discontinued in the US and I wanted to try the manual before it's too late.
The Nissan cvt is not really bad it’s just nobody changes the fluid/filter and does regular maintenance to keep them going then are surprised when they break
@@Vex-zz7br Had two, they both failed before making it out of warranty so........
I like conventional wet plate clutches when it comes to automatics. When set up properly will perform just as well and last much longer.
So what Scotty wants to tell Cvt is good or not i did not understand as he talks too fast :(
We love you Scotty 🙂🙂🙂 thank you Scotty I took your advice and bought a Toyota Highlander, do to the fact I have this Nissan sentra terrible CVT transmission went out ONLY AT 90,000 MILES AND I HAD TO BYE A USED TRANSMISSION TO FIX THE CAR AND EVER SINCE IT ONLY BEEN GIVING ME PROBLEMS I HAD THE CAR IN THE SHOP FOR OVER 6 MONTH ONLY WAS ABLE TO DRIVE IT FOR A YEAR WHEN I BOUGHT IT, IT HAD ONLY 79,000 MILES AND BACK IN DECEMBER 2019 I BOUGHT MYSELF A TOYOTA HIGHLANDER WHICH I NEVER LIKED TOYOTA OR THOUGH THEY WERE REALLY GOOD VEHICLES AS YOU STATED THEN I WENT AND DID MY OWN RESEARCH AND FOUND OUT EVERYTHING YOU SAID IS TRUE TOYOTA ARE THE BEST AND RELIABLE VEHICLES, AND KEED IN MIND I WAS A HONDA AND ACURA OWNER AND THOUGH NOTHING IS BETTER THAN A HONDA UNTIL I JUST BOUGHT A TOYOTA HIGHLANDER 2014 AND NOTICE HOW REALIBLE VEHICLES THEY ARE I BOUGHT IT WITH 147,000 MILES AND IT DRIVES AS NEW I'M SHOCK TO SEE THIS IN A VEHICLE, ALSO I NOTICE THAT IN THE DOMINICAN REPUBLIC THERE ARE LOTS OF OLD TOYOTA FROM THE 80S STILL DRIVING IN THE STREETS AND THEY ARE VEHICLES BEING USED IN THE Most EXTREME WAY IN PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION AND THEY ARE STILL RUNING BUT YOU LOOK FOR HONDA AND THEY ARE JUST TO LITTLE HONDA BEING USED AS A MEAN OF PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION, WITH THAT ANALYSIS I WENT OFF AND BOUTH MY TOYOTA HIGHLANDER AND THE ONLY THING I HAD TO DO I JUST CHANGE THE OILS AND BOUTH THEM NEW TIRES THE FIRST DAY I BOUGHT IT BACK IN DECEMBER 2019 GOODYEARS TIRES AND OIL CHANGE EVERY 5,000 MILES ALSO WORTH SAYING THAT I RAN A CAXFAX REPORT AND I'M THE SECOND OWNER IT CAME FROM CALIFORNIA SOMEWEHRE IN THE COUNTRYSIDE OF CALIFORNIA PEARL WHITE BLACK LEATHER INTERIOR AND THE OWNER EVERY 57,000 MILES TOOK IT TO GET IT CHECKED AND OIL CHANGE WITH 4.5 OR 5 START ON THE CARFAX REPORT, RELIABLE VEHICLE YES IT IS I DROVE IT FROM THE CITY OF SANTO DOMINGO, DOMINICANA REPUBLIC TO SANTIAGO, PUERTO PLATA ON THE SAME DATE TRAVER THEM 3 CITIES THE SAME DATE AND NO ISSUES ALSO TRAVE TO LA ROMANA SAME DATE TRIP AND NOTHING NO ISSUES WITH THE NISSAN SENTRA I WENT AND TRAVED FROM THE CITY OF SANTO DOMINGO TO LA ROMANA AND ON NY WAY BACK THE TRANSMISSION CVT BLEW UP HAD TO TOW THE VEHICLE LATE AT NIGHT 9PM ON A DARK HIGHWAY SCARY STUFF TO THE CAPITAL AND THAT'S WHEN I HAD ENOUGH AND BOUGHT A TOYOTA HIGHLANDER! TOOK YOUR ADVICE AND THEY ARE THE BEST SUV OUT THERE AND REALIBLE THEY SURE ARE, I HAVE 7 YEARS OLD TWINS GIRLS THEY ARE MY LIFE AND THANKS GOD THAT NIGHT WHEN I WAS DRIVING WITH THEM SCARY STUFF TRANSMISSION GO'S OUT IN THE MIDDLE OF THE HIGHWAY LATE AT NIGHT WHERE THE WORST PART THAT THERE ARE THIEF THAT LATE AT NIGHT CAN ROB YOU AND EVEN KILL YOU, MILES FROM HOME AND IN A DARK SECTION OF THE HIGHWAY, I WAS LUCKY TO SEE LURKING AFAR A LIGHT AND LET THE CAR SCROLL AS MUCH AS POSSIBLE AND NOT PRESS THE BREAK SO THE CAR DID NOT COME TO A FULL STOP AND THANS GOD IT WAS A ALMOST A SLIM DOWN HILL WHEN THE TRANSMISSION WENT OUT BAD EXPERIANCE, AM WAITING FOR THE MECHANIC GIVES ME BACK THE CAR NISSAN SENTRA 2014 AND WILL SELL IT RIGHT AWAY AFTER HE FINISHES FIXING IT STAY AWAY FROM NISSAN PERIOD THEY ARE THE WORST VEHICLES NISSAN, INFINITI HORRIBLE EXPERIENCE AND HORRIBLE VEHICLES AM SURE YOU DON'T WANT TO EXPERIANCE THAT NIGHTMARE SPECIALY WITH YOUR KIDS ON IT THANKS GOD I WAS NOT WITH MINES WHICH I TEND TO ALWAYS BE WITH, THANKS GOD I WAS NOT WITH THEM.
I love the CVT on my 2018 Corolla. It has enormous fuel economy on the highway. I have 70 miles commute one way and I can get 43+mpg easy. (45+mpg if I drive super efficiently at 65mph all the time). I save lots of fuel thanks to CVT, it holds rev down even at high speeds. If don’t drive like maniacs, Toyota’s CVTs are great!
suvari225 I get 40 mpg+ in my RAV4 AWD LE with some city and some highway. Toyota’s 8 speed auto and 2.5 Dynamic Force engine are very efficient.
I had same car till a week ago. Loved it. Unfortunately it got flooded where I park it at work and insurance company totalled it.
So had to run out and buy a new car, got a Nissan Sentra, would of had to order a Corolla and didn't have any other transportation.
Sure did like that Corolla. My running average was 36 mpg eith that Corolla.
I had a Nissan, it was a thoroughbred dog. It was diabolical. Nissan can't make CVT s.
I’m amazed by where the redline is on the new CVT Honda Civics.
thats really smart to have an actual gear at low speed, and starting power and the BELT driven CVT at higher speed, lower torque. That makes a lot of sense you want the high stress at take off to be on an actual durable gear, and then once the car is moving the belt driven CVT can handle the lower stress speeds.
I changed the clutch on my 2001 Toyota Corolla @225,000 km. I brought the car used @100,000 km.
I only buy manual cars. Can even start when the battery is weak.
I received my insurance discount from my insurer I have my house my car and a liability policy and they gave me a check for $14 and change
$14? That's all? Ha! I got $16 from mine! I'm goin to Disneyworld!!
Oh...wait...maybe not... :(
I got $3.00
2015 Honda Civic runs ok . But There is windshield problem . The seals go 2 crap and bubble up after couple years
And I'm in the process of possibly getting a Honda CR-Z from my dad which has a CVT. It has well over 180,000 miles
Yeah, I drive a 2008 Prius with a CVT that has 209,000 miles on it. CVTs aren't automatically crap.
Well it’s a Prius what do you expect ޓކހރ-ލއއބޚ
@@MrJonsonville5 i driven a prius with 500k miles still runs fine lele Toyota is godly
ޓކހރ-ލއއބޚ the prius has an ecvt, its different from the cvt
@@Kamal_AL-Hinai you think so? I also can't exactly buy a car as of now considering I don't have a job because of the covid
Put a clutch in my 81 f700 dump truck, over 15 yrs ago. This truck works year round. In and out the dump hundreds of times a year, stuck in the mud a lot, gotta rock it out. Just drive em easy.
I have a honda civic 2003 sedan 1.5litre vtec with the 5 speed automatic transmission got to repair at 170,000km the best trans in. My opinion
Faraz Hassan what part of wearing out at 105,000 miles makes this a good transmission? Sounds like junk to me.
170,000km? I eat that for breakfast. My 2012 civic just surpassed 340,000km
That Honda 5 speed automatic is proven unreliable. You doing a repair to it means that it has issues. If you want quality buy a 2003 Toyota Corolla. Those automatics never have an issue. Those 4 speed automatics from Toyota are simple and reliable. Plus they were avaliable in a manual. A tip is that when you come to a stop put the car in neutral. Then when its time to go put it back in drive. This is for automatics, dual clutch transmissions, and CVT's. You will thank me.
My 66 Ford thunderbird C6 is still original. It has a second oil pump in the tail. It even would push start which I did once when the battery died.
My CVT just went out in my 2015 Civic. I have 261K miles on it. Cost to replace the CVT through Honda is over 7k. I can’t complain though. That’s a lot of miles on it.
lol did you get it replaced? Did you get a used one? I’m getting interested in your Honda just like I am with Scotty’s celica
I have learned so much from you. You know your stuff. I will say this it seems to me that the cvt is better and long lasting in cars that have small engines 4 cylinder non turbo 120-130 hp and keep up the service.I know a couple of people with a Nissan cube they both have over 150 thousand miles on them and still going strong
Well the Honda accords like mine (2013) are abut 190 hp and they seem to easily make it to 200K without any issues. And it’s not that slow considering, 0-60 in 7.5s is not too shabby for a cvt.
As long as you do the proper maintenance, they are a dream
The wife’s CVT in her 2015 Nissan just bit the dust at 97k miles. As a faithful student of Scotty’s, I know he teaches us to stay away from CVT transmissions and Nissans...BTW she had this car before we met so it wasn’t me that failed Scotty, LOL. Anyway, the two cars we’re looking at (Toyota Corolla and Honda Civic...again from Scotty’s recommendations) all seem to come with CVTs now. So I came here to see what Scotty thought about these new ones. I’m relieved to hear that they make them better now. We’re going to go with the civic. I myself have a Camry. I want the opportunity to personally compare the two most recommended makes and see which one holds up better.
CVT on my Mitsubishi Outlander, was still like new at 220km plus, when I sold it.
Mitsubishi know what they're doing, that's why they extend the life of their models, for a decade or longer sometimes, makes things easy and they get to perfect the cars over time.
It's now 2024 and I am buying a Toyota with CVT. I've heard they're very reliable. Thanks for your advice.
Just can't possibly dissipate the immense heat off of those pulleys without frying the rest of the transmission. I've seen the old Jatco's in the Mitsubishi's last 200K and the same trans last 70K. Front tires and the brake pedal pad was always worn on those that failed. Aggressive off and on the accelerator driving kills them.
I have a 2014 subaru forester with a CVT. 115,000 miles and no issues and no maintenance due yet. Still works as it did the day it was driven off the lot.
We have a 2014 forester with 120k (the engine burns oil but that’s beside the point) the cvt is alright but the problem I have is Subaru’s programming, for example we have and Altima corolla and forester of the three I think the Forester cvt is the worst because is huge delay when pressing the gas and how it just takes off while in the corolla and Altima you can slowly accelerate and be just as fast but the forester as soon as you barely press the gas is just goes
i was lucky enough that i bought 2013 Honda civic and it has automatic transmission. i still drive the same care with 300000 km on it and it is still fantastic.
Seems like before the Honda CVT software update my 2014 Civic's acceleration was more lively. Not as much now.. But, on the plus side: my transmission hasn't exploded yet... So far so good, I guess.😆
Exactly, they lowered performance so the trans would survive longer.
Mitsubishi seems to have figured out CVTs, on a 2014 Outlander with 117k miles the transmission has been running like day one. They’ve had some software problems with em causing hesitation in 2015-2016 models but for the most part they seem to be doing alright.
Me watching this with my 2014 CVT Honda Civic: 😳
You should be out there changing the transmission fluid right now. 😉
@@GrabLifeByDaPoosy Don't worry lol I changed it about 20-25k ago because when I got the car I didn't know the mtnce records.
I had a 2014 Civic EXL That I recently traded in for a 2017 RAV4 Limited. I never had any transmission issues, and it had 80K on it. That was the greatest little car. It was so smooth and fun to drive. I did have the trans fluid changed every 30K with the Honda fluid.
Dude me too i have 108,000 2014 exl
Don't worry we will get though this together. 🙏
The Ford Fusion used the Aisin CVT from 2010-12. We never, ever seen one back for CVT issues, and some of them had well over 150K miles on them. The 2013-present day HF-35 CVT on the Fusion.....that's a different story. Quite a few of those crap out around 60-90K. Cost to replace the HF-35 CVT, about $8500.
If my CVT of my scooter failed I just replace the whole parts for les than 50 bucks.
You need to head on crash test that scooter to make an accurate comparison.
The 7 year old JATCO in my Altima just turned 100K. Still runs great! My advice: Get a trans temp gauge, if it drifts above 215, slow down. Also, I change my fluid at 26K, 48K, Filter and fluid at 79K, and (after watching Scotty) again did filter and fluid at 85K. Guess that's why its still running? That, and I very seldom put my foot in it.
I have an 2014 Nissan Altima with an CVT engine and it working fine
until it breaks. It won't last long
Not for long especially if it has high mileage
I'm at 165,000 on its engine and kept up on my oil changes so we shall see
One of my friends has a 2010 altima and he has 179k. But he always changed the cvt fluid every 30k miles. He always drives fast too.
CV transmission, not engine.
Thank you sir, for sharing the wonderful insights into Honda s CVT performance over years. In 2012 November, I went for 2012 accord LX model for 19,300$ instead of 2013 for 21300$. Simply because 2013 was moving to CVT and I just did not like the fact that after spending that kind of money I have to be a Guinea pig for Honda. Today after seeing this video, I am happy that I took a good decision.
Thanks for sharing information that cab save us lot of hassle and pain in maintaining a car.
"They would work perfectly fine...until they broke"
Ain't that always the way !
We have a 2014 civic lx with a CVT we purchased it new and now has 160,000 trouble free miles . Have changed the fluid in the CVT when it was recommended.
My 2009 Lancer with a CVT is still going strong with 100k miles, I really love it and really hate Standard transmissions, at least on busy cities
Hi Scotty, I have the i-shift transmission Honda 2006. This is a manual trans. Robotized, there are two actuators controlled by the Computer to change the gears. Sure the clutch wears out like a normal manual transmission. The next thing is the actuators, 2 of them have to be rebuild, but that is no biggy, they are like 400 US for both. They last around 150K miles or they say. I am at 89K miles so I have few years to go yet. But in the UK where these Honda's Civic 8-gen were build, they have it down pretty well and not so expensive. I saw a video were the mechanic said that they will replace the clutch and the actuators, relearn and all in 6 hours. Thanks. Its very nice to drive many years, but that is not a drivers car.
Co-workers 2012 Prius was pushing 400k miles, mostly city from delivering pizza. The only mechanical part he replaced was the brake pads and the battery pack at around 380k. Unfortunately it got wrecked so he got another 2012 Prius. Toyota cvts are bulletproof.
Toyota hybrids use in electronic CVT, instead of belts and pulleys it’s just one planetary gear set with two electric motors, that mimics the behavior of a conventional CVT transmission. They are pretty much indestructible
Most Dual Clutches above 200ft lbs use wet clutches. Also my Porsche PDK has lasted 110,000 miles on the stock clutches. Also replacing them is not hard, slightly harder than a conventional manual. The software to recalibrate the clutches is cheap, VW you can use OBDeleven/ Porsche you can use a Modus or Softtronic.
I'm a Honda lover!!!
My dad, brother-in-law, and I drive a 2018 Toyota Camry Hybrid and it’s about to be two years old with about 115,000 miles estimated about 250 miles mon-sat and sometimes Sunday, and she’s had no issues, I’ll keep talking all updated
Thanks for answering my question about taking the cat off my 77 vett . You're the best 👍👍
I took the cat off my car too, but he didn't seem happy about it. He likes to sleep over the hood when it's warm.
@@Tiagotaf lol ya but I bet it runs better 😂🤣
@@Kamal_AL-Hinai thanks for the tip 👍but I think I'll just keep them off all together 👍👍
Cvt rough on mine BUT , they are amazing for long distance. Cvt is to provide minimal fuel useage. They provide just enough power to move vehicle
I absolutely despise cvt transmissions! I've drove a Corolla with a cvt and it always felt like the transmission was slipping. I also drove a Civic with a cvt. The Civic had a "manual" feature and tried it out. When I put it in 1st, the transmission hesitated then went into "first". The other simulated gears were fine it just did not like simulated first.
I noticed that you have a Camry TRD parked out on the street in the background.
I tried the sport mode on a 2023 Toyota Camry. It drove fine, and it used the gearstick to shift instead of silly paddles, but it was absolutely nothing like driving an actual manual. There's a certain feel to a manual that you can't emulate!
Passat VW 2.0tdi 140hp 6g DSG, 300kkm works perfect with no one issue. Every 60kkm wet clutches dsg oil changing. My brother has rav4 toyota cvt, it is unable to drive for me, I have got feeling it doesn't accelarate, my friend rav4 as well cvt, one week after guarantie expired cvt dead. Cost 8500Euro. Thank you Mr.Scott for good advice ;)
I’ll stick to the 8th gen and pre-facelift 9th gen Civics with standard autos
2013 Facelifted Civic was the final year for the 5-speed automatic.
yep, friend of mine got 400k on hers, and only needed oil changes. I got an 08 gx. i burned the starter out because of the problem where you have to let the idle go down to under 1k on a short start up, because of a computer glitch or it won't start until you crank it like a mother...when it's cold.. so now i' about to swap that out.
The Wife and I just bought a couple new cars in the past couple of months, good deals.
Toyota CHR with CVT trasmission, with fixed first gear
Subaru Impreza, with Manual Transmission
Best of both worlds
The U.S. CHR doesn’t have the first gear CVT. Where are you located?
As an AAMCO Technician. I got to say your spot on. Great info
What do you think about the CVTs on the Ford Fusion Hybrid? I have a 2018 Fusion Hybrid S and I changed the fluid in it already. Seems to be doing fine so far at 84 K miles.
I have a Nissan CVT. It has 80,000 miles on it and it runs perfectly. I will change the CVT fluid at 60,000 miles intervals. The push chain/belt needs to be sufficient enough to handle the loads. Adding enough ring bands on the push chain or push belt makes all the difference. I believe in CVT.