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Dee Flint wrote:
Someone skilled in driving a vehicle with a manual transmission and actually using it can reap a number of performance benefits. These include improved gas mileage, better passing performance, better performance in hilly terrain, etc. If people were required to learn how to drive vehicles with manual transmissions, more of them might actually choose to drive such vehicles. Dee, N8UZE Not all of those statements are always true. As fond as I am of manual transmissions, sometimes automatics have the advantage. A hydraulic torque converter with a manually controlled "automatic" transmission is better at drag racing than a manual gearbox under many conditions. This is less true under road race conditions where the lower torque needed to be handled by the transmission allows the newer style "manual" transmissions to change gears in milliseconds. The secret is 2 transmissions, one for the odd gears, one for the even, and 2 clutches, you are literally in 2 gears at the same time for a short period of time. Takes a lot of computer control. That's one way to do it, there are others. The landscape is very blurred nowadays concerning what is a manual and what is an automatic transmission, with "manuals" in modern race cars being more automatic than "automatics" in non-race cars. And the state of CW vs digital is about the same. Except CW can always be beat if your PC works. You just need to select the correct mode. tom K0TAR |
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