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Disappointed with power

Discussion in '2.5 Gen Tundras (2014-2021)' started by Johntoy, Oct 27, 2024.

  1. Oct 27, 2024 at 7:10 PM
    #1
    Johntoy

    Johntoy [OP] New Member

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    Just bought this 2017 SR5 and wondering why when going up incline (and not very steep at all) the transmission shifts back and forth many many times and it seems like it is unable to keep set speed. If this is normal then I can’t imagine trying to pull anything. Anybody?
     
  2. Oct 27, 2024 at 7:15 PM
    #2
    Danman34

    Danman34 New Member

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    What motor and how many miles?
     
    HulkSmurf14 likes this.
  3. Oct 27, 2024 at 8:49 PM
    #3
    d33pt

    d33pt New Member

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    Is it on 37's and stock gearing? More details would help.
     
  4. Oct 27, 2024 at 9:34 PM
    #4
    blenton

    blenton New Member

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    6487EC8E-088D-4A7C-B579-82ECBECAEFB3.jpg

    This will fix it.
     
  5. Oct 27, 2024 at 10:30 PM
    #5
    Rodtheviking

    Rodtheviking New Member

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  6. Oct 28, 2024 at 6:20 AM
    #6
    Jaypown

    Jaypown New Member

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    Not Normal

    We need some more information. Hows your maintenance on it? You should easily be able to accelerate up any incline. Even at highway speeds. Yeah it might downshift on you some but once you're in a low enough gear, she'll eat.
     
    Fobroader likes this.
  7. Oct 28, 2024 at 6:36 AM
    #7
    koditten

    koditten I am easily distract...look! A squirrel!

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    Put the transmission in tow mode and report back.

    I run both of mine in tow mode 100% of the time.
     
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  8. Oct 28, 2024 at 7:23 AM
    #8
    1UP

    1UP Truck Gang

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    Need more details. Do you have a 5.7L or 4.6L? Miles? Tire size? Were you towing? What was the incline and distance you observed this at? Depending on the grade and elevation I experience this also.

    Remember, elevation saps your power.

    You could need anything from a new air filter, plugs, or fluids flush. Or it's normal due to the grade and elevation.

    A supercharger would probably solve it and fix a permanent smile on your face.
     
  9. Oct 28, 2024 at 8:50 AM
    #9
    Johntoy

    Johntoy [OP] New Member

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    4.6L , 40,000 miles. Left it at the dealer this morning. Not sure on tire size, nothing crazy. Does not have a tow mode.
     
    woods and koditten like this.
  10. Oct 28, 2024 at 9:50 AM
    #10
    fallen0

    fallen0 New Member

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    Not meaning this in a bad way... But, are you being a granny with it? Push the pedal down and get the engine to 3k+ RPM. These pigs are too heavy, especially with the 4.6, to lug around the low rpms.

    It will eat gas... Cost of doing business...

    You can also try S-mode to select the top gear.
     
  11. Oct 28, 2024 at 10:52 AM
    #11
    blackdemon_tt

    blackdemon_tt Battery Slayer

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    I would second S-mode, since the transmission will hunt for gears on any type of incline. I get annoyed and drop it to 3rd gear and 4th gear, depending on how much incline is left.
     
  12. Oct 28, 2024 at 11:24 AM
    #12
    AZBoatHauler

    AZBoatHauler SSEM#140 / 2.5 gen plebe

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    Try the 5.7 next time. That extra .75” of stroke gives you almost 100hp.
     
    Last edited: Oct 28, 2024
    Terndrerrr, ZPhilip and T-Rex266 like this.
  13. Oct 28, 2024 at 11:34 AM
    #13
    Vizsla

    Vizsla 2 = 2.5

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    Reset the transmission adaptive learning? lol.
     
  14. Oct 29, 2024 at 2:13 PM
    #14
    2020cement_tundra

    2020cement_tundra New Member

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    yes this is it, 5.7 ftw!
     
  15. Oct 29, 2024 at 2:20 PM
    #15
    Johntoy

    Johntoy [OP] New Member

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    For sure. Can’t believe it was so popular, big mistake
     
  16. Oct 29, 2024 at 8:30 PM
    #16
    blenton

    blenton New Member

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    Just some friendly ribbing from the 5.7 crowd. The 4.6 is a good engine that makes good power. My buddy had a 4.6 tundra that he used for years to pull his construction trailer, often weight 7k lbs up a 10% grade at around 6000' elevation. It's actually one of the reasons I bought my 5.7 tundra, so don't feel like you made a mistake.

    As a real answer to your original question, if you are using cruise control, depending on the hill and your drive mode, shifting up and down a lot doesn't have much to do with power, but with being in the power band. The transmission nor the vehicle can predict what the road looks like ahead of you, it can only guess at what lay ahead and react to what it is seeing at the moment via load and vehicle pitch/attitude/speed. If it's pitched nose up, losing speed, and high load for example, it assumes you are on a hill and will add throttle until load exceeds ~93%, then downshift a gear and repeat until it's happy with the load and speed. Unfortunately, if you have lost speed, it will want to gain that speed back, requiring even more load and more gear. Once reached, it will see low load and try to shift up a gear until the load is heavy but not excessive.

    Vehicles run most efficiently at high load with low RPM, so in order to be more fuel efficient, the gearing and shift logic are programs such that cruising speed is rarely in the power band, but rather just close enough to produce that high load, low RPM, fuel efficient operation. Low RPM also produces less wear and tear on the vehicle and driver, as well as less incurring less frequent servicing.

    Some earlier model tundras had more aggressive throttle and cruise settings, which led some to complain of the exact opposite - the vehicle downshifting immediately on hills and not upshifting for a while after the hill had passed. Again, the vehicle doesn't do a good job of predicting the road ahead, so the vehicle was programmed to be a little more aggressive and keep the vehicle in the powerband for longer to assure consistent speed and power. Folks complained that the tundra wasn't fuel efficient and that the throttle and cruise were too aggressive, so in later models that neutered it to some degree. You are seeing the result of that, unfortunately.

    The fix is easy. Your motor makes plenty of power to conquer hills and pull trailers - even pull trailers up hills! The solution is driver input. You, as the captain of your vessel, can command more power with tips of your toes, or a downshift with the flick of a finger. You are inherently better at reading the road ahead with the eyes in your head than letting a blind computer predict it from what road has already passed. So command more power before reaching the throws of gravity straining to restrain you; drop down a gear with gearshift before the motor lugs in languish. Hold that gear until you hear the thunderous shout of freedom from the torrential tailpipe, proclaiming to the world that you have conquered the monumental mountain in a momentous mockery of the typical malignant mediocrity of modern motorists relying on their overdrive overloads!!

    You can also get a tune from a trusted vendor to kinda do that for you...
     
    Last edited: Oct 29, 2024
  17. Oct 30, 2024 at 3:56 AM
    #17
    Funnyguy713

    Funnyguy713 I can't get Jiggy with this Sh!t

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  18. Oct 30, 2024 at 4:01 AM
    #18
    vtl

    vtl New Member

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    It is not luck of power, it is ECU tuned to keep MPG at least double-digit. Even 4.6 has enough guts to spin rear wheels on your incline. Be more aggressive with throttle input, move it quicker, ECU looks for how fast the pedal moves.
     
  19. Oct 30, 2024 at 4:32 AM
    #19
    Bprose

    Bprose Old member

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    Very eloquent answer. :thumbsup:
     
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  20. Oct 30, 2024 at 5:11 AM
    #20
    Johntoy

    Johntoy [OP] New Member

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    Thanks fellows! Very helpful
     
  21. Oct 30, 2024 at 9:17 AM
    #21
    Bergmen

    Bergmen New Member

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    I ONLY drive my 2018 in S-mode. Manually selecting the gear (and RPM) is the only way to go, no hunting.

    Dan
     
  22. Oct 30, 2024 at 4:57 PM
    #22
    DCLarston13

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    Transmission hunting while going uphill is not normal or desirable. A second opinion from a similarly outfitted Tundra would be a good thing if that can be arranged. Maybe it is normal?? Most of the responses seem to elude to operational issues or it being a 4.6, maybe, but maybe not. The vehicle is a 2017 which only has 40000 miles on it. So it was not driven much or on short trips. Short trips are not great cause your fluids may not reach operating temperature. My suggestion is, in this order, Disconnect the battery to reset the system leave it disconnected for about 30 seconds and step on the brakes while it is disconnected. Reconnect and drive and see what happens. If no change, then replace the transmission fluid see if that helps. After that you may need a good shop to give you an opinion.
     
  23. Oct 31, 2024 at 5:47 AM
    #23
    tjacob95

    tjacob95 New Member

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    how do you do that??
     
  24. Oct 31, 2024 at 5:49 AM
    #24
    KNABORES

    KNABORES Sarcasm incoming

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  25. Oct 31, 2024 at 6:06 AM
    #25
    clownkillerloaf

    clownkillerloaf New Member

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    same
     
  26. Oct 31, 2024 at 6:09 AM
    #26
    clownkillerloaf

    clownkillerloaf New Member

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    my last tundra was the 4.6, a 2014. Keep it in S-mode to stop the gear hunting. The 4.6 is just as solid as the 5.7, you've got a good machine
     
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  27. Oct 31, 2024 at 7:11 PM
    #27
    Bayou Spartan

    Bayou Spartan New Member

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    Great in-depth response
    Learn something from this as well
     
  28. Oct 31, 2024 at 8:09 PM
    #28
    Rodtheviking

    Rodtheviking New Member

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    Disconnect battery for at least 30 minutes.
     

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