HUH?
By "locked in first" are you refering to position of the shifter or function of the trans? They are not necessarily the same thing.
The issue is that most autos essentially freewheel down hill.
If you are driving your regular car/truck/whatever with an auto trans down a long steep hill, without using any breaks, the vehicle will speed up even without your foot on the gas and the shifter pulled all the way down into low gear (or any gear for that matter). There is nothing in the trans to stop the wheels from spinning faster than the engine. Think of a Detroit locker as an example. Neither wheel can spin slower than the driveshaft but they can spin faster (outside wheel in a turn)
If you are driving the same car/truck/whatever with a manual in the exact same manner (long down hill, no brakes, no foot on the gas), the engine will hold the vehicle back from speeding up (as long as you pick an appropriate gear) Think of a spool. Both wheels will always turn at the same speed as the driveshaft (tire scrub in a turn)
With compression braking in an auto trans, this freewheeling is eliminated. You get much more control on the downhills than relying on the brakes alone.
I hope this helps. :beer: