A few things: My car has 350000 km on it and the transmission is fine, you can load the parking paul like that without problems. I’ve worked with many mechanics over the years, none of them have seen that pin break. Also, you do not need to shift to neutral, just pull the parking brake before you release the foot brake.
Yea I agree with you that it’s not gonna break that easily but it also depends on the inclination of the surface. If you are parked on a flat surface most of the time it doesn’t rly matter but when on a hill it really starts to take effect.
Well I will tell you though my 99 f350 dually with the 7.3 has a broken parking Paul. The biggest pain in the ass too. Can’t park on anything steep. The E brake holds it on a slight grade but that’s it. Fairly big job to fix but I’m about to get er done
Might not break, but when you're on an incline it'll be difficult to get it back to D. I've had a car get stuck that way. It would not release from P and took a tow truck to pull it uphill for just a few inches so as to release pressure.
that is true first you have to have your brakes applied then you can shift in p but some people shift in p and then release their brakes before applying the hand or emergency brakes
Not bad info, you can also just keep your foot on the pedal break. Then shift from D to park, then pull e brake, all without letting foot of pedal brake.
You are not understanding the fact that what ever brake you apply first is where all the tension is going. Thats why if you park first and then hand brake, when you go back out to car to leave and you release the handbrake, the car jerks and the shifter feels very hard to Move to R or D
Nothing will be scrapped, that's how is designed to work, put it in park- pull handbrake ( you still hold footbrake while actuating the parking brake so the car will lock in the same place )
I think the more correct procedure might be to shift to N and active parking brake, THEN release the brake pedal (so you make sure the car weight resides on the parking brake), finally shift to P.
thats how i do it too, and everyone definitely needs to do the same especially when parking on a incline to make sure all that gravity is being held by the hand brake
@@victorp.r.muller6614 it depends on your auto box . Some auto have transition lock instead of e brake these tent to rock the most this is from toyota e cvt bring vehicle to a complete stop using foot break . With foot on break select park and engage hand (e) break. Never stop with car in neutral Hyundai tucson torque converter gear box the Same. . Autos have a pawl pin which can break when parking a car on the park setting without hand break
Why use the electric brake in N mode instead of D mode? My current sequence when parking is: D mode > press the footbrake > engage the electric brake > change from D to P mode > turn off the engine > release the footbrake.
Y'all are overthinking this. You really just can go from drive to park. Just make sure to engage the parking brake if you're on anything steeper than a slight incline before putting it in park. Those parking pawls aren't as weak and brittle as you think. I used to do the same thing as what the video described every single time I parked my car and all I ended up doing was ruining my parking brake cable. Not a very expensive repair, but it was still preventable.
I always put my foot on the brake first, pull the hand brake up then shift it into P for the last 30 years. To drive away, apply my foot on the brake pedal, release the hand brake, put it in D then let go the foot brake.
He forgot the most important move. When you put the car neutral. You engage the hand brake. Before you put the car in park. You have to release the floor brake. If you don't do that, you missed the trick.
@@mustang4928 you my friend are wrong but not really. As long as you have a good foot brake pressure you’re ok. But normally take it out of park before you release the E brake
See what I like to do is slow down to around 30 mph and then push the brake and put it into park as fast as possible before the car comes to a stop. You must do it this way. Your transmission will appreciate it for sure.
Apparently this guy has never figured out how to keep the brake pedal depressed while shifting into park and only releasing it after you've engaged the parking brake. The only time the parking pawl is under tension is if the car rolls enough the hit it because the parking brake wasn't engaged.
Thanx for da info I've been doing it wrong for such a long time ,as we speak am experiencing the very problem you talking about So we starting the car which steps to follow to avoid future problems
Neutral is only for long waits at traffic lights, Im a mechanic by trade and have never seen a gearbox failure from parking the way you described. its ok as long as the vechicle is stationary. and its not a locking gear its a locking pin on the Park setting.
ideally in the last step , before you put the gear P, you need first to release the brake. In that way you are sure that all the car's weight is stopped by the handbrake.
This video is right. I own an automatic and my gear got stuck because I went from D straight to P after engaging handbrake without first stopping in N. If your car allows for that , that doesn't mean this video is wrong please.
I love the simple manuals. Why can't the automatic gearboxes have a robust parking mode equal to leaving a manual gearbox in gear? Were the engineers really satisfied with that little pawl?
As long as the parking brake is on before you let off the brake the other steps especially the going to neutral before park is not applicable. Also. I live in Florida so most things are flat and my parking has been broke for the last 6ish years. It’s on the parking gear. P71 running strong though!
Guy did extra steps for no reason. So when u arrive at your destination while continuing to maintain foot on brake: 1. Engage E-brake or parking brake 2.Shift vehicle to Park 3. Release foot brake
You have auto hold. Just leave auto hold on and when you're done driving, select park and switch off the engine. The parking brake will automatically apply and the service brake will keep the car stationary until the parking brake takes over, putting no strain on your pawl. When you want to move away, just select drive or reverse and press the throttle. Simple.
This is wrong and correct at the same time. You can park directly in normal circunstances. BUT! If you park in a hill then you have to use the emergency brake first and the put it on P. You can put ot first on N first to make sure the EB is correctly set and next P.
Constantly shifting gears and having to press on a clutch pedal, having to time the release of the clutch perfectly, and hoping your car doesn't jolt and stall doesn't seem better to me at least.
Most car manuals (particularly slightly older ones) will actually recommend pulling the parking brake before putting in park. However, I don't think it matters. I think most people find it natural to put in park first, then pull the parking brake.
Everybodys saying to keep holding the brake when applying the handbrake. I've been doing this for years. Shift into park, handbrake then release foot brake. The car still struggles to get out of Park when on a hill. No matter how you go about it, the car will always rest on the Parking gear and NOT the handbrake. You must first shift into Neutral, apply the handbrake then LET GO of the foot brake allowing the car to rest on the handbrake, then foot back on the brakes, shift into Park then let go of the foot brake. This way the car rests on the handbrake and not your transmission. People are saying you'll be fine as long as you keep your foot on the brake when shifting from Drive to Park and then handbrake. THE CAR STILL RESTS ON THE PARKING GEAR AND NOT THE HANDBRAKE. How hard is it to understand.
I disagree. I apply foot brake, shift into park, hand brake, then release foot brake. I know it's the hand brake holding my car in place because if I had of released the foot brake right after putting it in park my car would roll back slightly. So therefore the hand brake is keeping the car in place.
Im 56, I've been driving since I was 16 and never had a transmission problem because I didn't shift into parking correctly. As a matter of fact, I never use the E-brakes with an automatic transmission.
Idk about this car but usually in most automatic cars u press on the break and then it will let u shift gears without damaging the transmission it usually doesn't have anything to do with the parking brake.
Ignore the comments that disagree. If you park on a steep incline/decline, let the car sit on the handbrake primarily, and only use the parking pawl as a secondary backup.
😅Just press on the foot brake until the car is halted. Then you can pull the hand brake and shift the gear directly from any pontion to PARK this method is fastest and safe for the gear😅
Uhhh.. you can also just keep your foot on the pedal break, then shift it into park and then pull the e-break without letting go of the pedal break. This guy is confusing people 😂
Why? All the stresses are then on the transmission, where it should be on the handbrake. Transmission have failed because of this and people have been killed.
@@spencerburgess9181they are DESIGNED to be used this way.....what do you know that engineers that designed it dont??? Nobody has been killed either....😅
My car’s not electric but some reason it has the battery icon and an E next to it lighting up when I turn my key. But the car won’t start. I can turn on my headlights and my radio. So yes I know the electricity is on.
Keep your foot on the brake when you set the parking brake.
My car need to be off for the hand brake to work, so is it ok to swich off the car in N while stepping on the brakes, then aplly the hand barake?
Yes, this guy is stoopid. If you parked on inclined position, you cannot go to neutral without releasing the brake pedal
werd like y all the extra steps dont let go the brake until u set the parking brake and skip the non sense
A few things: My car has 350000 km on it and the transmission is fine, you can load the parking paul like that without problems. I’ve worked with many mechanics over the years, none of them have seen that pin break.
Also, you do not need to shift to neutral, just pull the parking brake before you release the foot brake.
Yea I agree with you that it’s not gonna break that easily but it also depends on the inclination of the surface. If you are parked on a flat surface most of the time it doesn’t rly matter but when on a hill it really starts to take effect.
My mom did that with her old 2012 4runner that she sold for YEARS, no problem whatsoever
Well I will tell you though my 99 f350 dually with the 7.3 has a broken parking Paul. The biggest pain in the ass too. Can’t park on anything steep. The E brake holds it on a slight grade but that’s it. Fairly big job to fix but I’m about to get er done
Might not break, but when you're on an incline it'll be difficult to get it back to D. I've had a car get stuck that way. It would not release from P and took a tow truck to pull it uphill for just a few inches so as to release pressure.
If rhe parking is inclined. The pin will bear the car. If its flat its okay to go P directly.
Just Keep your foot on your break when setting the parking break.
you cant do anything with the gear lever without pressing the brake
that is true first you have to have your brakes applied then you can shift in p but some people shift in p and then release their brakes before applying the hand or emergency brakes
@@homelessdrifter9508yes you can.
My car need to be off for the hand brake to work, so is it ok to swich off the car in N while stepping on the brakes, then aplly the hand barake?
My car dose not have a gear box💀
Karen's brother started a social media page, this is it!
Name is Kevin
Darren
Not bad info, you can also just keep your foot on the pedal break. Then shift from D to park, then pull e brake, all without letting foot of pedal brake.
Exactly……. So simple
This is what I know too , but the UA-camr says it’s wrong 😂. His opinion sounds strange
@@omotosodiya3811forgive his chinese cooking show voice 😂😂😂
You never pull ebrake last it’s always first to ensure tension is not on parking brake
You are not understanding the fact that what ever brake you apply first is where all the tension is going. Thats why if you park first and then hand brake, when you go back out to car to leave and you release the handbrake, the car jerks and the shifter feels very hard to Move to R or D
Nothing will be scrapped, that's how is designed to work, put it in park- pull handbrake ( you still hold footbrake while actuating the parking brake so the car will lock in the same place )
I think the more correct procedure might be to shift to N and active parking brake, THEN release the brake pedal (so you make sure the car weight resides on the parking brake), finally shift to P.
Good one, I always notice with my car how it moves a tiny tiny bit after releasing the main break (although the parking break is engaged)
that's the right way to do it.
thats how i do it too, and everyone definitely needs to do the same especially when parking on a incline to make sure all that gravity is being held by the hand brake
@@victorp.r.muller6614 it depends on your auto box . Some auto have transition lock instead of e brake these tent to rock the most this is from toyota e cvt bring vehicle to a complete stop using foot break . With foot on break select park and engage hand (e) break. Never stop with car in neutral
Hyundai tucson torque converter gear box the Same. .
Autos have a pawl pin which can break when parking a car on the park setting without hand break
I'm confused. Isn't P = parking brake? So is it hand brake first and then P or vice-versa?
This is why I love social media...you get every type of stupid.
A perfect example is you
@@Worldp766and you
@@Worldp766 takes one to know one
@@Worldp766 wdym. the guy in the vid was just adding unnecessary steps. you just gotta have your foot on the brakes
😅He talk like a pro, Stupidity get him money from you tube😅
I do agree with you. I always practice this sequence:
D
depress pedal brake
N
engage electronic parking brake
P
release pedal brake
Why use the electric brake in N mode instead of D mode? My current sequence when parking is: D mode > press the footbrake > engage the electric brake > change from D to P mode > turn off the engine > release the footbrake.
Y'all are overthinking this. You really just can go from drive to park. Just make sure to engage the parking brake if you're on anything steeper than a slight incline before putting it in park. Those parking pawls aren't as weak and brittle as you think. I used to do the same thing as what the video described every single time I parked my car and all I ended up doing was ruining my parking brake cable. Not a very expensive repair, but it was still preventable.
I always put my foot on the brake first, pull the hand brake up then shift it into P for the last 30 years. To drive away, apply my foot on the brake pedal, release the hand brake, put it in D then let go the foot brake.
same
The only important thing is keep your foot on the brake. After that anything goes.
I've been doing it all wrong for 300,000 miles on my Tundra with original tyranny.
Your Tundra is a tyrant?
@Jun Silver
It's a Tyrannysaurus Rex.
How were you doing it the whole time?
Ok I'm gonna start doing this thanks 😂
Thanks 🙏🏼
"So fking awesome!!"
He forgot the most important move.
When you put the car neutral. You engage the hand brake.
Before you put the car in park.
You have to release the floor brake.
If you don't do that, you missed the trick.
@@mustang4928 you my friend are wrong but not really. As long as you have a good foot brake pressure you’re ok. But normally take it out of park before you release the E brake
Take the car out of park before releasing the e brake @johnsellers9623
Auto transmission cars are DESIGNED to be held by park pin.......nobody uses e-brake on auto trans cars anyways....
Except with high climb roads parking
Wrong. Park it on a steep incline and tell us how easy it is to take it out of park.
@@Strtrkr never been stuck yet...lol
You must be American.
hope you struggle with your cars on an incline more than 5%
My car 🚗 is 13 years old I just put the car in park, Car still working 💯%.
I actually put the emergency brake on first. While it’s in drive. Then I put it in neutral to catch the brakes. And then park it
Set the Ebrake before you release your foot from the brake... that's all that matters.
Put it in p, don't release the breaker pedal until handbrake is engaged.
Bingo
What's a breaker pedal
Break, typo..
@@kausar456 did you take a break while pressing the brake.
Hahaha man I'm off. Nice.. yeah it's brake. Lol.
Or u can directly when its on D pull up the hand brake then put it on P
See what I like to do is slow down to around 30 mph and then push the brake and put it into park as fast as possible before the car comes to a stop. You must do it this way. Your transmission will appreciate it for sure.
Or you can put your foot on the brake, set it to park and then activate the hand brake while your foot is on the brake.
Thank you very much Mick
Keep your foot on the break until the handbrake is engaged, most people do this without noticing
Tks for solving my problem.
You forgot important point :
Put it on N
Pull up the hand brake
Remove your foot from the stopping break
Lastly put the the gear on P
Hand BRAKE nimrod...
@@bigkiwial Thanks psycho.. already corrected
😂😂 you both funny banter
hand bake?
@@vriendinvanchucky done English man, hope you're happy now?
I have 300000km on my bmw e61 and never had any issues doing this
That's why manufacturers are getting rid of the gear level and use electronic knob instead.
Thank you. Kept lookibg for this on the web. Very clear message without over explainging
I'm a mechanic for over 40 years and I never see anything wrong in a transmission.
My car puts the handbrake on itself, automatically when it is ready.
What car is that please 😮
@@darlingtonunuaneejehiegbe9051 My car does that too.. Toyota CH-R
Just keep the brake while shifting to P and 1-2 more seconds after.
In my car if you shift to neutral put handbrake and then shift to P then handbrake gets disengaged bez there is reverse gear in between.
Apparently this guy has never figured out how to keep the brake pedal depressed while shifting into park and only releasing it after you've engaged the parking brake. The only time the parking pawl is under tension is if the car rolls enough the hit it because the parking brake wasn't engaged.
I do foot brake, shift to park, parking brake, then release foot brake
lol 😂 or you could keep holding your foot brake until you finish in the first order you mentioned, like everyone does 😂
Maybe when you park on a hill. Most garages, driveways and car parks are level enough.
Thanx for da info I've been doing it wrong for such a long time ,as we speak am experiencing the very problem you talking about
So we starting the car which steps to follow to avoid future problems
thank you.
I heard "don't mount the p" 😂😂😂
Neutral is only for long waits at traffic lights, Im a mechanic by trade and have never seen a gearbox failure from parking the way you described. its ok as long as the vechicle is stationary. and its not a locking gear its a locking pin on the Park setting.
It's not a handbrake. It's a parking brake or emergency brake.
My car automatically apply the handbreak when shift to P so I keep pressing the footbrake, shift to P and depress the footbrake😊
ideally in the last step , before you put the gear P, you need first to release the brake. In that way you are sure that all the car's weight is stopped by the handbrake.
put your pedal on a break, pull
the handbreak then P
I need to drift to park
Why do I recognise your pfp
@@_NovaTheFurry minecraft enderman, youtuber enderman.
The emergency brake disengages when put in gear
I always park my car in gear and then apply the break. Granted it is a manual.
This video is right. I own an automatic and my gear got stuck because I went from D straight to P after engaging handbrake without first stopping in N.
If your car allows for that
, that doesn't mean this video is wrong please.
my wifes auto is 2001 ford focus still running fine thanks
Wrong - P is the same as N but with a pin, so the difference except addition tear because of shifting to and back
I love the simple manuals. Why can't the automatic gearboxes have a robust parking mode equal to leaving a manual gearbox in gear? Were the engineers really satisfied with that little pawl?
As long as the parking brake is on before you let off the brake the other steps especially the going to neutral before park is not applicable. Also. I live in Florida so most things are flat and my parking has been broke for the last 6ish years. It’s on the parking gear. P71 running strong though!
Me: *pulls the handbrake up while holding my foot on the brake when the gear is on D then release brake and put the gear in P
P gear is just a metal tab it’s super strong.
Guy did extra steps for no reason.
So when u arrive at your destination while continuing to maintain foot on brake:
1. Engage E-brake or parking brake
2.Shift vehicle to Park
3. Release foot brake
You have auto hold. Just leave auto hold on and when you're done driving, select park and switch off the engine. The parking brake will automatically apply and the service brake will keep the car stationary until the parking brake takes over, putting no strain on your pawl. When you want to move away, just select drive or reverse and press the throttle. Simple.
This is wrong and correct at the same time. You can park directly in normal circunstances. BUT! If you park in a hill then you have to use the emergency brake first and the put it on P. You can put ot first on N first to make sure the EB is correctly set and next P.
Thank God I own a manual transmission car
Constantly shifting gears and having to press on a clutch pedal, having to time the release of the clutch perfectly, and hoping your car doesn't jolt and stall doesn't seem better to me at least.
Nais❤❤❤❤❤😊😊😊😊😊🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉
Most car manuals (particularly slightly older ones) will actually recommend pulling the parking brake before putting in park. However, I don't think it matters. I think most people find it natural to put in park first, then pull the parking brake.
Unless they learnt in a car with a manual gearbox first, like most people outside North America.
Everybodys saying to keep holding the brake when applying the handbrake. I've been doing this for years. Shift into park, handbrake then release foot brake.
The car still struggles to get out of Park when on a hill. No matter how you go about it, the car will always rest on the Parking gear and NOT the handbrake.
You must first shift into Neutral, apply the handbrake then LET GO of the foot brake allowing the car to rest on the handbrake, then foot back on the brakes, shift into Park then let go of the foot brake. This way the car rests on the handbrake and not your transmission.
People are saying you'll be fine as long as you keep your foot on the brake when shifting from Drive to Park and then handbrake. THE CAR STILL RESTS ON THE PARKING GEAR AND NOT THE HANDBRAKE. How hard is it to understand.
I disagree. I apply foot brake, shift into park, hand brake, then release foot brake. I know it's the hand brake holding my car in place because if I had of released the foot brake right after putting it in park my car would roll back slightly. So therefore the hand brake is keeping the car in place.
As a person who doesnt have a car, i can confirm this is how you drive a car
when you shift to P then pull the handbrake before releasing the brake pedal
He missed a step. Apply your high heel wearing right foot to the brake pedal and set your purse down before shifting into park.
Im 56, I've been driving since I was 16 and never had a transmission problem because I didn't shift into parking correctly. As a matter of fact, I never use the E-brakes with an automatic transmission.
Idk about this car but usually in most automatic cars u press on the break and then it will let u shift gears without damaging the transmission it usually doesn't have anything to do with the parking brake.
Ignore the comments that disagree. If you park on a steep incline/decline, let the car sit on the handbrake primarily, and only use the parking pawl as a secondary backup.
Bro read my mind 💀
All of the weight of the car or suv is now on the breaks and not your transmission.
I think the correct way. Complete stop. Put to neutral. Then apply the handbrake. Put to Park. Then release the footbrake
You forgot to say after activating the handbrake - take foot of foot brake and then place into ‘P’.
I agree otherwise it’s all pointless
It was thought an automatic car was easy to drive, but it turns out that the easy one is the manual!
If your parking on a hill.
E brake only use to slide car
He's right.
What happens when we do following - Put gear to P mode -> switch off engine -> Put hand brake
Pls advise
Manual version plz
😅Just press on the foot brake until the car is halted. Then you can pull the hand brake and shift the gear directly from any pontion to PARK
this method is fastest and safe for the gear😅
P standa for parking.. a specific mode for this goal.
This is not correct unless you take your foot off the brake after engaging the parking brake and before switching from N to P.
Driving a manual car is so much easier 🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧
This is only true on some cars
Hey conflicting comments ..Questions 1. Handbrake first or Moving the Gear to Parking ? 2. While doing step 1, Should my feet press down gear or no ?
sounded like how to cook carrots on a turkey soup 😂
Only on a incline or decline
As a Audi automatic owner, I don't have such issue
ive been parking it wrong for 50 yrs
Mechanic told me this decades ago and never rest your hand on shift gear
when setting off do you put in gear first then remove epb or unlock epb then put in gear?????????
Uhhh.. you can also just keep your foot on the pedal break, then shift it into park and then pull the e-break without letting go of the pedal break. This guy is confusing people 😂
Except it never clicks, gets more difficult to put into drive or does anything ever so well done!
What about driving the car from P?
What is the sequence? Shift to D then release the hand brake?
Some put it on park and dont pull handbrake at all.
No one uses handbrake on automatic car
Why? All the stresses are then on the transmission, where it should be on the handbrake. Transmission have failed because of this and people have been killed.
@@spencerburgess9181 i have been in automatic transmission and it's gear that just gets locked
@@spencerburgess9181they are DESIGNED to be used this way.....what do you know that engineers that designed it dont??? Nobody has been killed either....😅
All you mfers parking on hills?? No need for a parking break on flat land😂
I don't know how to drive an automatic car but I know manual cars
i just keep foot on brake, put into P, turn engine off , handbrake on, foot off brake
My car’s not electric but some reason it has the battery icon and an E next to it lighting up when I turn my key.
But the car won’t start. I can turn on my headlights and my radio. So yes I know the electricity is on.