Pop in Neutral at Red Light?

Joined
Feb 6, 2025
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This is a rather silly question, but I'm curious if anyone else in the world besides me pops their automatic transmission into neutral while waiting for the traffic light to turn green?

You can either leave the transmission in drive and hold your foot on the brake, or pop into neutral and relax your right leg.

You manual transmission guys pretty much have to go into neutral or hold the clutch pedal in.
 
Never.

You'll be causing a small amount of wear having those 1st gear clutches apply and release all the time. Not a lot, but more than you would just leaving it there.

Although if your vehicle has auto stop-start it might be handled differently.

With my manual transmission cars I usually knocked it into neutral while coming up to the stop if I knew I was going to be coming to a complete stop. Usually without the clutch being involved.
 
My mom used to do this in her Honda accord. When I learned more about cars and how transmissions worked I told her to stop doing that! It unnecessarily wears components. It’s also a safety issue, IMO - if you are stopped at a light and notice someone about to rear end you, you need to be able to instantly more forward. If your car is in neutral, that extra few seconds could make a big difference.
 
On my 84' Mustang, always popped it into neutral. Didn't feel like keeping my leg down on the clutch pedal. No slave cylinder on that car to assist me. Pedal to cable to fork. Leg gets tired after awhile. Then the whole bit of one on the brake and one on the clutch. Got annoying. Sold the car after a year of that nonsense. Went back to automatic transmissions. Fun little car though ! Had a 302 in it / 5 speed
 
My Accord has a brake hold feature that will let you rest your leg at a light. Basically, it applies the brakes for you when you hit 0 mph and holds them until you tap the gas again. I don't care for it.

Putting it in neutral would only work if the ground is absolutely flat.

The use of neutral on a manual transmission is another topic.
 
So if your foot is no longer on the brakes are your brake lights on? Could be a big issue there.
 
Also check out these previous discussions on this topic:

 
Every clutch automatic has a Forward/Input Clutch, You should not do what you're doing as it puts undue cycling/wear on that clutch.
This is why I don’t.

Cycling the transmission in and out of neutral adds wear.

My right leg is strong enough to handle that couple pounds of pressure on the brake pedal while I wait…
 
I do. The DCT disengages the clutch with my foot on the brake anyway, so I just put it in neutral so I can take my foot off. First gear is already engaged and ready to go, putting it in drive simply allows the clutch to do its thing. I've got neuroma pretty bad in my right foot so it's a relief to be able to take the pressure off at stop lights.
 
On my automatic transmissions , ( which is all I have now ), I leave it in drive. Read somewhere, years ago, leaving in drive is less wear and tear on transmission. The only thing that's cooking are the brake light bulbs. So, I keep an eye on them. The cops in NY love to pull you over for a burnt bulb, and see what else they could nail you on. Gotta keep their quota books up :(....
 
Here's a little fun fact:

In the past, Teslas could be programmed for Creep, Roll, or Hold behavior when you let off the accelerator. Creep is like a typical automatic transmission. Roll is like being in neutral. And Hold applies the regen brakes to slow the car down and prevent it from moving at a stop.

Since 2024, new Teslas will only have Hold behavior. So, to the OP, get a Tesla, lol!

Interestingly, hybrids that I've driven have all been set up to creep like traditional automatic cars.
 
Just a curious question.
How come with all the other clutches its a good thing for them to go on and off all the time, also they at times can be modulated to make nice easy shifts, does not modulating a clutch, meaning lots of engage and release cause wear?

Most all torque converter clutches do that all the time, and it is only one friction material surface in most TC's, the first gear clutch pack is usually a multi disk pack just like all the other clutches in the transmission, they are all skating on fluid. Leaving in gear on a very long stop condition allows the stirred up torque converter fluid to heat up, years ago my buddies dad a long time transmission expert told me best not to always leave it in gear for long stopped periods.

So the question is why is the first gear clutch pack so week and weeny that it isn't suppose to cycle like all the others. Lets not forget when coming to a stop it automatically shifts to low. So just pop it in to neutral before that happens and all is then good. Right?
 
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