What Would Happen If You Put Your Automatic Transmission Car In Reverse While Driving?

Reverse while driving

Driving on a long stretch of highway on a serene night could make one’s mind wander towards all kinds of questions, like what is the meaning of life, does God really exist and what would happen if I put the gear from Drive to Shift? The first two questions might be tough cookies, but the last one is tempting enough to make you actually try the feat! After all, the answer is merely a couple of clicks away!

Of course, the act is NEVER recommended since in theory, the gears moving forward have to come to a complete halt before they are to be reversed. Naturally one would picture ball bearings splattering out and gear fragments grinding into pieces if a full speed car was to be reversed. But is that really what happens?

Watch the video below to find out as AutoVlog actually try this on their automatic vehicle!.

That was anticlimactic, wasn’t it! As it turns out, automotive engineers are shrewd enough to recognize such wild ideas, and have preemptively put safety checks in the cars. For automatic transmissions, nothing happens since automotive engineers place a function called Reverse Inhibit that prevents this selection when on high forward speeds.

Craig Renneker, Ford’s Chief Engineer for transmission, says,

“Putting it into reverse [in modern cars] when going forward has no action at all, the car just ignores the request until you get down to a proper speed,” said Renneker, using Ford’s six-speed automatics as an example; “It’ll just say ‘hey, I know you want reverse pal, but I’m just not going to give it to you until the appropriate time.'”

Manual transmissions come with physical locks in the shape of lockout rings in the gear mechanism that makes selecting reverse an impossible task.

“The main problem you’re going to be fighting is what you’re trying to get the thing to do is something it really does not want to do,” Renneker continued.

 

As many of us already know, the manual gear set would growl and grind if you mistakenly tried to put reverse when on high speeds. The synchronizer mechanism in manual cars can only change the speed of transmission for smooth engagement and forcing it to match shaft speeds while putting it in reverse could greatly damage it.

In short, it’s best to NOT try this – ever!

7 comments

  1. Aamir Reply

    Hey doesnit work the same way if we put into parking gear while driving ? Will it gradually slow down to appropriate speed and then stop…or it will suddenly stop ?

    • James Smith Reply

      As I said in my previous post, it was a ’57 or ’58 Plymouth as I recall. It went into neutral, not reverse. Nor did it go into “S” which stood for second gear in 3 speed automatics. I am not sure what it stands for today, I have not owned an automatic in 15 years.

  2. James Smith Reply

    This is nothing new, A friend and I tried this back in the 1950s. The same thing happened (almost) His Dad’s Plymouth with the push button transmission selector went into neutral. BTW, You mistook “S” for “R” in your text. They are not the same thing at all. No wonder you have to try dumb stuff, you know less about cars than my dog.

    • Umer Sohail Post authorReply

      That must be one smart ass dog! Although you might want to look at the video again; nowhere it talked about the Sport mode!

      • James Smith Reply

        You are right, he is a smart dog. I still won’t let him drive, though. He always wants to get in the driver’s seat but he is the navigator as long as he stays awake. I didn’t mention any sport model either. The writer said “S” instead of “R”. But he did try reverse. not knowing what would happen, that took some nerve. My friend and I were 16, so neither nerve nor smart had anything to do with it. In those days, the idea and the action were separated by, well, by nothing. 😉

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