jay745
What Would Glenn Danzig Do
- Location
- Slightly Outside Chicago
- Car(s)
- Mk6 racecar, Tacoma
When this Rona thing is over id be happy to give some instruction.
So getting better but I'm still having issues when dropping into second. It's not smooth and the car jerks to much. Clutch and gas timing not right yet dropping to second. Thanks for the tip
Motor mounts also really help with that
Hi all thanks for all your help so far. I'm become a better manual driver by joining this forum.
I have been able to drive very smoothly with this car when driving like a granny. But I want to have some more fun with the car. This is where things get harder for me.
I think the problem is when going full throttle on 1st, I let the gas off fast, clutch in and shift into 2nd (5k rpm) however the rev hangs forever. If I let the clutch out sooner I would feel a jerk because the rpm is too high get 2nd at the current speed and a big jerk would happen (rock back and forth too). If I let the clutch out later to smooth it out then I lose speed which would mean a lower rpm at 2nd as well. I found that if I release the clutch out fast I'll get the jerk but if I press the gas hard immediately the jerk would sort of stop but most likely it's slipping the clutch.
Oh it's complicated.... Looks easy but hard to get right for a noob.
I think you are right. ThanksAfter you shift out of 1st are you completely releasing the gas pedal when doing this full throttle? The big jerk when you shift out of 1st is because you're not getting back on the throttle when you shift into 2nd and you're getting compression braking. Try doing this at half throttle until you get smoother to lessen the chance of any damage.
I don't know if I can do this without breaking the car from practicing. This approach is very new to me and sounds really advanced. ThanksI'd stop trying to be fast until you learn how to be smooth. The best way to use a clutch is to push it as little as possible without jerking the car around. Try driving around normally and getting able to use the clutch pedal like a switch instead of something to slip to match revs. DSG now but I've had vehicles (before rev holding) that you could drive pretty smoothly without even using the clutch. Get off gas, put to neutral, wait for revs, slide into next gear, continue down the road. No idea if that's feasible here and not recommended but the idea is to never slip the clutch except from a standing start and then as little as possible. Pull with the motor and never the clutch unless you're power shifting and OK with early replacement and you don't gain much if anything anyway.
He's trying to become a better driver, not take the n00b way outtoo soon to say DSG?
^nailed it. Study and log your rpm/speed for each gear until it becomes second natureLearning to drive fast with a manual is a little like learning to play the guitar. If you try to play fast when you are still unskilled it will sound awful. If you try and drive you car fast before you are skilled you are going to burn your clutch up and mess up your car. If you are learning the guitar you practice, practice, practice playing precisely and slowly play faster and faster while maintaining that precision.
Try driving normally but try and make your shifts so smooth a passenger would not ever notice you have made a shift. For the time being make your shifts at a moderate rpm while accelerating at a moderate speed. Make your 12 month goal to become a skilled driver instead of a fast driver. As you become more and more skilled your ability to drive fast will automatically increase.