gear 2
Driver use gear 'L' or '2' when driving uphill or downhill which required higher gear ratio to move the uphill. Downhill wise, driver use '2' or 'L' for safety purpose. The low gear ratio will use the high gear ratio to slow down the speed of driving downhill and creating 'pulling' force on your car to safety purposes. Gear '2' can be use for overtaking on the highway too provided at the appropriate speed.
The term that compares the number of teeth on a driving gear to the number of teeth on the driven gear is called the "gear ratio." It is expressed as a ratio of the number of teeth, indicating how many times the driving gear must rotate to turn the driven gear once. This ratio is crucial in determining the mechanical advantage and speed of the gear system.
More than likely a 3.08 gear ratio. which is a highway gear and a little strip very little unless not stock clutch/torque conveter
Once you have achieved highway speed, you would stay in the highest gear, except for steep uphill or downhill grades.
Common cars can't do highway speeds (65 mph) in first gear and many have rev limiters.
To determine the speed of rotation of a gear driven by another gear, you can use the gear ratio formula: Gear Ratio = Number of Teeth on Driven Gear / Number of Teeth on Driving Gear. In this case, the gear ratio is 40/20 = 2. Since the driving gear is rotating at 10 rpm, the driven gear will rotate at 10 rpm / 2 = 5 rpm.
Torque is increased on the larger, driven gear. The increase can be calculated as the ratio of the radii of the two gears. For example, if the small gear has a radius of 2 cm and the larger gear has a radius of 10 cm, the torque ratio is 10/2 (ten to two), or 5/1 (five to one). So the driven gear is producing 5 times the torque of the driving gear. The speed ratio is the reverse; the driven gear is rotating at 1/5 the speed of the driving gear.
according to velocity ratio i.e N1/N2 = D2/D1 which implies that diameter of gear is inversly proportaional to speed . hence, DRIVEN GEAR will move faster as it is smaller in size than the DRIVING GEAR
Yes, it just makes the ratio different. Such as 1 to 3.00 instead of 3:00 to 1
it is to select "overdrive" gear in transmission. mainly for highway driving. if you have both "D" and "D" with circle around it, use "D" for most driving needs.
The gear ratio of a train, also known as its speed ratio, is the ratio of the angular velocity of the input gear to the velocity of the output gear. The gear ratio is very important when it comes to physics.