Can the trans be told to start in 2nd gear instead of 1st gear. This helps in my auto starting in water or on snow.
You must not be familiar with the integrity of a torque converter. Just as a clutch is designed to last so long with x amount of slip against the flywheel a torque converter that is ridden too much overheats the fluid, and after so long breaks down the material within the torque converter itself and when it fails dumps said material into the tranny doing severe damage.Ride the torque converter like riding a clutch really! They work completely different a torque converter is designed to slip. They lock up via hydraulic pressure when the tcm commands it too.
Now on to the real question, yes our trucks could be programmed to start in second. But that would require tuning the tcm which no one has done yet. Also you would still want it to start in first when your towing. So that would make it even more complex to program.
TurWith the amount of Turbo lag with the factory tune you need first gear even if it seems to be a short gear.
But if your concern is traction on snow and you're rocketing off and relying on traction control then your foot is the problem (and imo diesel characteristics likely aren't suitable for your driving style) not the transmissions gearing..
For the sake of simply answering the question yes. It could. But it would be custom tuned and it would lessen the life of your transmission because it will have to ride the torque converter to have the engine rpm high enough to reach boost and produce power. Same as riding a clutch. The gears are designed to have the torque converter lock by the time the engine reaches boost if not sooner and stay there.
I do understand that between that short gear and diesel's short rpm band it limits the trucks performance off the line. It's just the way it is. MPGs over 1/4 miles and 0-60
With the amount of Turbo lag with the factory tune you need first gear even if it seems to be a short gear.
But if your concern is traction on snow and you're rocketing off and relying on traction control then your foot is the problem (and imo diesel characteristics likely aren't suitable for your driving style) not the transmissions gearing..
For the sake of simply answering the question yes. It could. But it would be custom tuned and it would lessen the life of your transmission because it will have to ride the torque converter to have the engine rpm high enough to reach boost and produce power. Same as riding a clutch. The gears are designed to have the torque converter lock by the time the engine reaches boost if not sooner and stay there.
I do understand that between that short gear and diesel's short rpm band it limits the trucks performance off the line. It's just the way it is. MPGs over 1/4 miles and 0-60