What has changed in automotive transmission technology that has allowed manufacturers to be able to make 10 speed transmissions today?

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When I first started driving in the 90s it seemed like the 4 and 5 speed transmission was the best, modern transmission you could get. They were relatively reliable, and had enough gears to make acceleration, and fuel economy good in my Honda CRX.

Today, I can buy a Honda Odyssey with a 9-speed automatic transmission standard, and 10-speed on the high end model.

**What has changed in transmission engineering, materials science, and technology to allow more gears in the gearbox?**

What are the potential downsides? E.g. is the typical 10-speed as reliable as the old standard 5-speed gearbox?

Edit: To be more clear, this is an ENGINEERING, MATERIALS SCIENCE, and TECHNOLOGY question. I understand the benefits of having more gears for ride quality, and fuel efficiency.

In: Engineering

14 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

Better computerized machine tooling. This technology has been improving by leaps and bounds every decade.

On the consumer side, you get really cheap 3d printers. On the heavy industrial side, you can make a much more complicated component faster, with same reliability, and slightly less metal. For cars, transmissions are the component that benefits from that extra complexity.

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