Owner's Manual

Driving On
Grades
Parking on
Hills
Reduce speed and shift to a lower gear
before
you start
down a long or steep downgrade.
If
you don’t shift
down, you might have to use your brakes
so
much that
they would get hot and
no
longer work well.
On a long uphill grade, shift down and reduce your
speed to around
45
mph
(70
km/h)
to reduce the
possibility of engine and transmission overheating.
If
you are towing a trailer and you have an automatic
transmission with overdrive, you may prefer to drive in
DRIVE (D) instead of AUTOMATIC OVERDRIVE
(a)
or, as you need to, a lower gear). Or, if you have a
manual transmission with FIFTH
(5)
or SIXTH
(6)
gear,
it is best to drive
in
FOURTH
(4)
gear
(if
five speed
manual transmission) or FIFTH
(5)
gear (if you have a
six speed manual transmission) (or, as you need to, a
lower gear).
You really should
not
park your vehicle, with
a
trailer
attached,
on
a hill. If something goes wrong, your rig
could start to move. People can be injured, and both
your vehicle and the trailer can be damaged.
But
if
you ever have to park your rig on
a
hill, here’s
how to
do
it:
1.
Apply your regular brakes, but don’t
shift
into
PARK
(P)
yet, or into gear for a manual transmission.
2.
Have someone place chocks under the trailer wheels.
3.
When the wheel chocks are in place, release the
regular brakes. Then apply your parking brakes until
the
chocks
absorb the load.
4.
Reapply the regular brakes. Then apply your parking
brake and then shift to PARK(P) or REVERSE (R)
for a manual transmission.
5.
Release the regular brakes.
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