This could be several things. If it is a older car, and has acarburetor, you might not be getting the right fuel to air mixture ratio, and it needs to be looked at. If it is a more recent car, your computer could have a flaw and is doing the same thing that the carburetor was doing in the other example. Not enough info to properly diagnosis
It depends on the gearing of the car. If you are in the highest gear and 40mph in that gear is under the idle rpm of that car than you will stall.
Travelling to slow in a high gear, so clutch in and lower the gear.
If the car is starving for fuel or air (low power at idle), the car will stall while turning.
If you mean each time you engage car in any gear forward or reverse & it immediately stalls - you have a bad torque converter. Start engine, put foot on brake, put car in NEUTRAL, if it DOES NOT stall, but it does stall if you repeat this test when you put car in drive or reverse = bad torque converter - It's called a "stall test"
sensor or belt
sensor or belt
Check your transmission fluid level and also if the gear chamber is not well greased then it will make them stick causing the vehicle to stall.
A 1998 Honda Accord could stall because it is out of gas. The car could also stall because of a bad computer.
Yes, a busted head gasket might stall your car if the gasket causes the car to overheat. This can actually blow the heads and cripple the car completely.
A problem in the fuel line could cause it to stall. On a stick shift, letting off the clutch too soon would cause the vehicle to stall.
yes, if you are doing too few revs for the gear you are in then you will stall.
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