CFz Discussion Club discussions, Civic talk, and general automotive info not covered by a sub-forum.

Why do "Heel-Toe" ??

Thread Tools
 
Search this Thread
 
Old 02-Oct-2003, 09:35 AM
  #41  
Registered User
 
imported_gatherer's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: on a race track
Posts: 17,846
Well Martin if your around this is an interesting read on this topic:

http://www.altimas.net/forum/showthr...g&pagenumber=1
imported_gatherer is offline  
Old 02-Oct-2003, 10:23 AM
  #42  
Senior Member
 
imported_Cablerat's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: Pickering
Posts: 3,984
Originally posted by Cablerat

K side question..
about the synchro matching..

say im in 3rd, i wanna downshift to second can't I just..

Press clutch in,
Shift into second,
press gas to match rpm,
and release clutch?

I don't need to release clutch in N first do I?!

Originally posted by gatherer


try it.... 1 of 2 things will happen...

A) you'll do it fast and get a jerky motion...

B) you'll do it slowly and not get a jerky motion...

ok now why is this?

for A) it's simple the synchros haven't had enough time to line up the speeds of the input and output shafts witht he engine speed and you'll feel a jerky motion when you step off the clutch

or B) you'll get a nice smooth shift and it'll be great for the jerkiness but it will be slow because synchros take time to line up output and input shaft speeds... (esspecially when downshifting (output faster the input)

the reason to release the clutch in Neutral is so that the input shaft spins up to the speed of the engine.. and hitting the gas gets it going as fast as the output shaft... therefore everything is running at the same speed and it's all going to be smooth when you push the clutch in and shift to 2nd....

when you know how to do this right a double clutch down shift becomes vry smooth and you don't really stop when yanking the tranny into neutral... you just keep going to the required gear while your feet move fast enough to hit the gas and release and repress the clutch pedal.... it's really easy to do once you've got the basics of a double clutch down the next step to try it while braking and master the heel toe ...

most people that have ridden with me would say I'm crazy for downshifting into 1st at 40km/h and with most trannys you can't unless you rev match everything which would involve the double clutch.... and most would say I'm completely nuts for doing it.... however I do it all the time and my car hardly jerks while I do it ... more or less when I do it on the street I'm working on it for when I race....

now if only my car had torque everywhere so that I didn't have to downshift.... hmmmmmmm
Hmm.. ok but when I downshift and give it gas to match rpms, as long as I match it right there is zero jerk.. If you do it fast enough that is..

Say tranny is spinnin at 3K in 3rd gear at 60KPH.. If wanna shift into second, I know the tranny should be at about 4.5K in 2nd at 60KPH, so as long as I rev the engine up to 4.5 and release straight into second it's perfectly smooth... Input = output = no jerk.. So what's the diff there???
imported_Cablerat is offline  
Old 02-Oct-2003, 10:27 AM
  #43  
Registered User
 
imported_gatherer's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: on a race track
Posts: 17,846
Originally posted by Cablerat


Hmm.. ok but when I downshift and give it gas to match rpms, as long as I match it right there is zero jerk.. If you do it fast enough that is..

Say tranny is spinnin at 3K in 3rd gear at 60KPH.. If wanna shift into second, I know the tranny should be at about 4.5K in 2nd at 60KPH, so as long as I rev the engine up to 4.5 and release straight into second it's perfectly smooth... Input = output = no jerk.. So what's the diff there???
simple .. without releasing the clutch you get (with your example)

output = engine but not equal to input...

input is the input shaft of the tranny and the reason you release and blip the throttle is so you get the following:

output shaft = input shaft = engine speed = road speed = no wear
imported_gatherer is offline  
Old 02-Oct-2003, 01:38 PM
  #44  
Registered User
 
imported_MartinGouda's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2002
Location: sauga city
Posts: 1,573
you still havnt expalind the benifit of going to N.
imported_MartinGouda is offline  
Old 02-Oct-2003, 02:01 PM
  #45  
Registered User
 
imported_gatherer's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: on a race track
Posts: 17,846
did you read what was posted in that link I posted .. the dude wrote alot and I for the most part agree... it's all in there full explination
imported_gatherer is offline  
Old 02-Oct-2003, 02:03 PM
  #46  
Registered User
 
imported_gatherer's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: on a race track
Posts: 17,846
Ok I'll copy the text out. these are not my words but I agree with the explination

I really depends upon the driving situation. For example, if you are starting off from a light on an uphill slope, you will need to running the RPMs up a little higher between shifts so as not to lug the engine in the next higher gear. Or if you are starting off from a stop on a road which has a higher speed limit, you will need to get going and up to speed a little quicker.

But generally the rule of thumb is not to take the engine up any higher than necessary for next gear change to handle the load. For argument's sake, if you have the V6, consider 2500 - 3000 for the **** to second, then the others a little sooner. This is because the ratio between first and second gear is far greater than between any of the other gears.

Here is a composite of some writeups I did on this site last year which you may find informative. Since you are just learning to drive a manual transmission, I STRONGLY advise you to take the time and learn correctly and avoid developing any bad habits. Frankly, most people do not know how to properly operate a manual transmission. Set yourself apart from them and be one who does.

Happy reading.


-------------------------------------------------------------------------------


PROPER MANUAL TRANSMISSION DRIVING TECHNIQUES

What follows is a collection of writings which I have posted at various times on this website in an effort to help answer some questions regarding the proper manner in which a manual transmission should be operated. While there are certainly many ways to drive a car with a manual transmission, there is really only one correct way. I was most fortunate to have learned these techniques while I was still in my teenage years. In so doing, I was able to avoid developing entrenched habits before they became really bad habits and difficult to correct. It is my hope that this helps you learn what I have learned and perfected over the years. If you do, you will reap the rewards, both financial and in the knowledge that you have mastered a technique that few do in their lifetimes. Have fun!



Under normal driving situations (not racing), when you start out from a standing start, you do so with the lowest possible RPMs, get the clutch out to full engagement as soon as you can while adding throttle. If you do this correctly, the transition will be smooth and seamless, and the wear on your clutch disk, pressure plate, release bearing, and flywheel will be minimized.

If properly designed (sufficient size and clamping pressure, etc.), and properly installed with no defects (correct torque, non-faulty equipment, alignment, etc.), then the next, and most important, factor to the life of the clutch assembly is the operator.

THERE IS ABSOLUTELY NO REASON WHY A CLUTCH CANNOT LAST THE LIFE OF THE ENGINE UNDER NORMAL DRIVING CONDITIONS.

When I speak of engine life here, I am referring to life before a serious teardown or part replacement such as a timing chain (200,000+ miles) or headwork. If you cannot get at least 100,000 miles out of a clutch, you are doing something terribly wrong. Obviously, racing constitutes a whole different approach and, as such, does not come under this.


Don'ts:

Do not use any more engine speed (RPMs) than absolutely necessary to get the car rolling in first gear.

Do not hold the car on a hill with the clutch.

Do not wait for a traffic light to turn green with the transmission in gear and the clutch depressed.

Do not rest your foot on the clutch while driving.


Do not ride the clutch in any gear (obviously you will to a small degree in first to start off).

Do not down shift by just removing your foot from the gas, moving the shifter into a lower gear, then releasing the clutch slowly.


Do's

Start off smoothly and with low engine speed, and shift in such a manner that if you had a passenger on board, they would not even notice the shifts.

Hold the car on hills with the brakes.. that's what brakes are for. NEVER hold a car on a hill with the clutch. The amount of heat generated by doing this is incredible.

While waiting for a light to change or while sitting in heavy traffic, put the transmission in neutral and get your foot completely off of the clutch petal. Leaving it in gear for extended periods heats up and shortens the life of the release bearing. The normal condition of a clutch is fully engaged so it stands to reason that's where it should be most of the time.

Resting your foot on the clutch petal while driving engages the release bearing.. see above.

Avoid riding the clutch as much as is humanly possible. You will extend its life significantly.

If you do not know how to properly downshift, DON’T. Use the brakes (should do this anyway), and avoid downshifting any more than necessary. Improper downshifting is analogous to riding the clutch because that is what you are actually doing. Learn how to properly downshift first and save yourself the frustration of premature clutch failure.


Clutches are wear items, heavily affected by heat caused by friction. In a front wheel drive car, they are costly to replace, so unless you like shelling out a lot of money periodically for the replacement of these components, learn the correct way. Learn it until it becomes second nature like breathing.

I spent some time teaching a lady with whom I worked 10 years ago these techniques when she purchased a new '92 Honda Accord LX. When I last spoke with her, she had well over 140,000 miles on the original clutch with no signs of slippage. So I'm not jerking anyone's chain here. Learn to operate a manual transmission correctly and you will reap the rewards by saving a lot of money. Plus you will be one of the few who know how to do this right.


I don't mean to set myself up here as some kind of guru because I am not. But I have been driving manual transmissioned cars for over 40 years. I have spent the time to perfect the process into an art form because when done correctly, that’s what it is. When I sold my '88 Mustang LX 302CID, it was 6 years old and had 77,000 miles on it. When the buyer drove it, he asked me when I replaced the clutch because to him, it felt very positive. I told him that I had never replaced it and that it was the original unit. I added that it wouldn't make any sense to replace a clutch after only 77,000 miles since that is not very much wear. He had a little bit of a hard time believing this, but he did buy the car. Three months later, he called me up to let me know how much he liked the car and to tell me had had not wrapped it around a tree. He again asked about the clutch and I again told him that it was the original clutch.

I used to own a 1966 Chevelle SS396/360HP. I was the original owner of the car. For a period of about 2 years, I was street racing the car frequently on the weekends. At 83,000 miles when I sold it, it would still break traction in all four gears and the clutch had no slippage. It was tight and strong. Now granted, American cars have traditionally had stronger clutches than Japanese cars. This is changing because the Japanese are putting larger and stronger (torque) engines in their cars.



Downshifting

Ah yes, downshifting. If I had to name just one facet of manual transmission errors-of-operation, this would probably be it.

To understand how to operate a manual transmission, you have to know how the clutch assembly and transmission work, and I am going to take the assumption that most do on this forum. I will only clarify synchronizers. They serve to match the speed of the gears in the transmission as the shifter is moved to a given gear. Now for downshifting.

Let's say you are in fourth gear and you are approaching a stop sign, so you decide to downshift from fourth gear into third. What most people do is just remove their foot from the throttle, depress the clutch while moving the shifter from fourth to third, then start releasing the clutch slowly until they achieve full engagement. If you do this, what you are actually doing is riding the clutch in third gear. After all, the engine has returned to idle (or close to it), you get into third, then just ease the clutch out which pulls the engine from idle up to the RPM's at which it will operate at whatever speed you are traveling in third gear. Here is the correct way to do this in steps that I will break down in a moment.

Raise your foot off of the throttle.

Depress the clutch.

Start the shifter up into third.

As you pass through the neutral gate, let the clutch out (doesn't have to be all the way) while at the same time blipping the throttle to increase engine speed BEYOND that which it will operate in the chosen lower gear.

Depress the clutch again.

Engage the chosen lower gear.

Let the clutch out while adding throttle.

As the engine RPM's decrease they will be met by the engaging clutch and opening throttle.

This should be a simple, smooth, fluid motion and you will know you've done it right if there is no jerking as the clutch comes out in the last step. Now for some details.

As you move into the neutral gate with your foot off of the throttle, the engine RPM's will be returning to idle. This is the point at which you want to blip the throttle a bit while at the same time engaging the clutch some. You want to get the engine turning faster than it will when you are in the lower gear you have chosen. The reason is that you want to spin the gears up to a speed that equals that at which they will be operating when you finally release the clutch in your downshift. If you do this right, there is no clutch slippage because the engine and the gears in the transmission will be spinning at the same or nearly the same RPM's. No slippage means you will get into gear with full engagement of the clutch sooner and with virtually no wear. To best understand this, you really need to know how a clutch assembly and transmission work together to deliver power from the engine to the drive wheels.

This takes a lot of practice, but if you get it down, you will be heads and shoulders above just about anyone else who drives a car with a manual transmission. You will begin to notice the mistakes other are making when they drive. Learn from their mistakes and it will both save you money and make you a far better driver.

So it's in with the clutch, start the shifter into the chosen lower gear, while passing through the neutral gate, blip the throttle and at the same time engage the clutch a bit to spin up the gears, then back in with the clutch as you get into the chosen gear, then finally release the clutch in one smooth operation.

Here's another little tip. Say you are waiting at a light for the green and your transmission is in neutral like it should be with your foot completely off of the clutch petal. When the light turns green, instead of just depressing the clutch and pushing the shifter up into first, pull the shifter partially into a higher gear first, such as second or third. The gears in those selections are not spinning as fast as the gears in first. By starting the shifter into a higher gear before you go to into first gear, you will cause less wear on the synchronizers and they will last far longer because they do not have to stop gears which are spinning at a higher speed. For cars which do not have synchronized reverse, definitely do this and you will not experience the grinding affect when shifting into reverse.


Say you are driving normally, shifting up through the gears to the one in which you wish to be for cruising. As you disengage the clutch and move the shifter to the next higher gear, you might notice a slight resistance just before you finish the shift. What you feel is the synchronizer for that gear forcing the drive gear(s) from the input shaft and the gears selected to "mesh". That is to say, their speeds are forced to equalize so that as they engage, there is no grinding and no damage to the gear teeth. That said, we can move to double clutching.

Double clutching was a technique that came about when earlier manual transmissions did not have synchronizers. If you did not double clutch, you would experience some serious gear grinding when shifting.

If you did not have synchronizers in you transmission, you would have had two choices when shifting gears: (1) put up with some really serious grinding and damage/breakage to gear teeth, or (2) manually match the speed of the gears in each selected shift so that you would eliminate the problems just mentioned in #1.

Suppose you are traveling in second gear, the engine is turning at 2500 RPM, and you are getting ready to shift to third. At the road speed you are going, let's say that once in third, your engine would be turning at 1800 RPM. When you remove your foot from the gas, the engine is going to loose RPMs quickly and by the time you get into third, the engine might only be turning 1200 RPM. Without synchronizers, you would need to raise the engine back up to 1800 RPM in order for the gears to mesh. By blipping the throttle and at the same time letting the clutch out some when you are passing through the neutral gate, you will both increase engine RPM and increase gear speed. As the engine RPMs fall back off, they will reach a point at which you will be able to complete the shift.

Now downshifting is much like this, only in reverse. In other words, you are going from a higher gear to a lower gear so if your engine was turning at 2500 RPM and you wanted to shift to second, You would want to blip the throttle enough to raise engine speed to perhaps around 3200 - 3500 RPM.


When you are upshifting, the RPMs fall off and most people find it pretty easy to adjust to this and to add throttle at the right time so that when the clutch comes back out, they have the proper RPM's for the gear selection/road speed.

However, most people downshift by (1) removing their foot from the throttle, (2) moving the shifter into the next lower (or chosen) gear, then (3) slowly releasing the clutch while adding little or no throttle. This is NOT the proper manner in which to downshift. What you are doing in effect, is riding the clutch in reverse. In others, you probably wouldn't dare attempt to start your car off in third gear because you would have to add a lot of throttle and really slip the clutch to get the car moving. When you downshift like the example I just gave, you are doing something similar to starting off in a higher gear, though it does take more energy to get a car moving from a dead start. Now if you double clutch during the downshift, you are spinning up the gears and the transition to the next gear will be quite smooth.


Junkyard asked a question about the concept of “passing through the neutral gate”. You don’t stop or stay in neutral. You are just passing through, so to speak. In your second question, you said I had mentioned to put the car in neutral when downshifting. Not exactly. Try this with the engine off.

Put the car in fourth. Depress the clutch and shift to third and let the clutch out. Now do the same thing, only this time as you pass through the neutral gate, let the clutch out some or a good deal and blip the throttle, then clutch back in, get into third, clutch comes out for the final time. That is the movement you want.

Incidentally, blipping the throttle is just a little stab at the petal, enough to raise RPMs to the desired level. You do not want to be on the throttle long because you will be in the process of shifting. Yes, this does take a lot of practice and may not come easily for many, but it is the best way, in fact the only proper way, to downshift because it very significantly reduces clutch and synchronizer wear (especially clutch), and once you get the hang of it, you will be able to do it quite fast.

The bottom line to all of this folks is to match engine speed to wheel speed in a given gear, and to do it in such a manner as to eliminate undue trauma to your drive train. I do this all of the time and have been downshifting like this since my very early 20's. I actually learned it from a magazine article (as I can best recall). If you know how a manual transmission and clutch assembly operate, all of the components and how they perform together, you will understand the beauty of the process.

Oh the grinding noise Junkyard hears when he starts letting up the clutch too quickly is most likely due to not having fully engaged the gear teeth and they separate (pop out of gear). That or he actually begins engaging the gear teeth before the clutch is fully depress so there is still some flywheel/disk/pressure plate contact.

One of the things I noticed right off the bat on my SE was that the clutch began to engage much too close to the floor for me (a contributor to the problem Junkyard has had). It was starting to engage about 1 inch from the floor, so I adjusted it out to 2 inches and it is fine. If you do this, just make sure you have the required toeplay, otherwise you will prematurely wear out your release bearing.


The purpose of letting the clutch out some as you pass through the neutral gate is to spin the gears up in preparation for the speed at which they must be at for the lower gear selection. This will allow you to get into that gear very easily. When you depress the clutch, you disengage the crankshaft from the transmission. The gears in the transmission will begin to slow down. By letting out the clutch some (or completely) in the neutral gate, you once again, MOMENTARILY, engage the full drive train and get the gears spinning. Only this time since you have blipped the throttle, they'll be spinning faster. As they slow down from the higher speed, your clutch will be coming out for the final time with the transmission in gear and the mesh will be smooth.

Try it both ways. Do it first the way you do it and notice that you have to add a little bit of force to get the shifter into gear. That's because the synchronizers are doing their job of gear speed meshing. Now try it the way I outlined and if you do it right, you will have virtually no resistance as you slip the shifter into your chosen gear.


Instead of going right into first as the light starts to go green, try starting the shifter into second gear.. don't have to go all the way into gear, though it won't hurt. This slows the gears down just as though you had gone on into first, but it's much easier on the synchronizers. And you won't get the "crunch" you mentioned when you have to move quickly.



To prevent rollback; practice, practice, practice, practice.

One way to do this is to find a nice little hill someplace where you won't be a bother to anyone. Take along some masking tape and mark off two sections with the tape a foot apart. Your goal is to keep the car from coasting back more than 1 foot.. of course you do not use the clutch to hold the car.. use the brakes. As you learn to do this, find another hill a little steeper. And so on, and so on.
imported_gatherer is offline  
Old 02-Oct-2003, 02:30 PM
  #47  
Registered User
 
imported_MartinGouda's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2002
Location: sauga city
Posts: 1,573
ok still there is NO reason to go to N

Double clutching was a technique that came about when earlier manual transmissions did not have synchronizers. If you did not double clutch, you would experience some serious gear grinding when shifting.

this does explain why i would want to "prime" the gear by rpm matching but dosnt show why N helps in any way because as you are coming out of the higher gear to drop down the gears are already spinning.

still i dont see any need for N in a car with a good driver and synchros.
imported_MartinGouda is offline  
Old 02-Oct-2003, 02:54 PM
  #48  
Registered User
 
imported_gatherer's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: on a race track
Posts: 17,846
(I'm now thinking this thread is what's going to keep me amused till spring)

anyways if you read the follow (taken from the huge quote above) I've added in bold a section of it thats important.

Double clutching was a technique that came about when earlier manual transmissions did not have synchronizers. If you did not double clutch, you would experience some serious gear grinding when shifting.

If you did not have synchronizers in you transmission, you would have had two choices when shifting gears: (1) put up with some really serious grinding and damage/breakage to gear teeth, or (2) manually match the speed of the gears in each selected shift so that you would eliminate the problems just mentioned in #1.

Suppose you are traveling in second gear, the engine is turning at 2500 RPM, and you are getting ready to shift to third. At the road speed you are going, let's say that once in third, your engine would be turning at 1800 RPM. When you remove your foot from the gas, the engine is going to loose RPMs quickly and by the time you get into third, the engine might only be turning 1200 RPM. Without synchronizers, you would need to raise the engine back up to 1800 RPM in order for the gears to mesh. By blipping the throttle and at the same time letting the clutch out some when you are passing through the neutral gate, you will both increase engine RPM and increase gear speed. As the engine RPMs fall back off, they will reach a point at which you will be able to complete the shift.

Now downshifting is much like this, only in reverse. In other words, you are going from a higher gear to a lower gear so if your engine was turning at 2500 RPM and you wanted to shift to second, You would want to blip the throttle enough to raise engine speed to perhaps around 3200 - 3500 RPM.
this is what I've been trying to say downshifting done properly is the same as a double clutch...

see shifting from 4th to 3rd in his example, he states that as you pass through the Neutral gate (meaning the car is in neutral at that point) you release the clutch and blip the throttle... and then press the clutch again to put the car in the required gear...

well if you look at that process the details show that you have in fact pressed the clutch twice. and therefore have double pressed the clutch or double clutched.

in the full post he man he states all the reasons for the downshift to be done.mainly it's so that your not riding the clutch according to his post but another reason is so that it's a nice smooth downshift.
imported_gatherer is offline  
Old 02-Oct-2003, 03:00 PM
  #49  
Registered User
 
imported_MartinGouda's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2002
Location: sauga city
Posts: 1,573
dude you havnt shown any reason there...this guy is a moron if he thinks that the tranny stops movingif the car is in motion.

think of it this way...

we both see that it takes longer to double clutch than to just shift so a negitive factor to it is less time in control of power. also you lose the breaking power of the tranny. and based on these ttwo factors i wouldn't use it..now tell me what improvment you will recive by using the tactic.

What advantage does it give you in a race?
imported_MartinGouda is offline  
Old 02-Oct-2003, 03:31 PM
  #50  
Registered User
 
imported_gatherer's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: on a race track
Posts: 17,846
simple, less wear on parts which means more reliablity also smoother shifts which means lesser wiegh shifting from front to back caused by jerking motions.... which is important...

Also having the braking power of the tranny is a null point since if your braking it'll be done with the brakes not the tranny ...

also look at it this way your blipping the throttle and releasing and pressing the clutch when you double clutch when your hand is moving through neutral.... your not removing your hand from the shifter when doing this or even stoping the motion of your hand.

if you sit in your car (with it off so that you can actually try this) and shift from one gear to another (doesn't matter if it's up or down shifting since your stopped) the amount of time it takes to move your hand from the first gear to the next gear is the amount of time it takes to do a double clutch. Also if shift from one gear to the next using the normal method the time it takes to complete that shift is the time it takes your hand to move the shift from the first gear to the next.... hmmmm sounds strangely the same to me..... how about you? so that means the time arguement is a Null point.

now I know your going to say that rev matching accomplishes the reduction of wear on the clutch without the need to double clutch however clutch is pressed for a longer time causing wear to the release bearing. also without double clutch the syncros are working hard to to spin the input shaft up to speed and those would wear. a simple (and easy to do) double clutch solves both the extra wear on the release bearing (the clutch isn't pushed for as long) and the syncro wear issue because the input shaft is spun up to speed with the engine (which while both rev matching and double clutching will keep it from hitting idle between shifts)
imported_gatherer is offline  
Old 02-Oct-2003, 03:50 PM
  #51  
Registered User
 
imported_MartinGouda's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2002
Location: sauga city
Posts: 1,573
bs...cant wait till the race...

all the racers i have asked agree...dc'ing has no use in solo
imported_MartinGouda is offline  
Old 02-Oct-2003, 06:12 PM
  #52  
Registered User
 
imported_jason_alt's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2003
Location: Aurora
Posts: 360
Jason,

Don't waste your time with this chooch. He's got it all figured out.
imported_jason_alt is offline  
Old 02-Oct-2003, 08:30 PM
  #53  
Senior Member
 
punkindrublic's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2002
Posts: 12,906
Originally posted by MartinGouda
bs...cant wait till the race...

all the racers i have asked agree...dc'ing has no use in solo

you must not be talking to very good solo2 racers...

and just for clarity... you have to shift to neutral to go from first to second... its not like your leaving it in nuetral for like 5 seconds per shift... split seconds....

but ya this thread is becoming like that one in the insurance forums where everybody was telling insuranceman he was wrong but he just wouldn't listen... this is the samething...
punkindrublic is offline  
Old 02-Oct-2003, 11:08 PM
  #54  
Registered User
 
imported_gatherer's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: on a race track
Posts: 17,846
Originally posted by jason_alt
Jason,

Don't waste your time with this chooch. He's got it all figured out.
thanks for the vote of confidence ... I have to have some amuzement over the summer... care to add input on the use of a double clutch (for downshifting) in the solo 1 world ? (since I know your big into that)
imported_gatherer is offline  
Old 03-Oct-2003, 02:13 AM
  #55  
Registered User
 
imported_MartinGouda's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2002
Location: sauga city
Posts: 1,573
so you are saying that you will release the clutch in N every time you pass it in a down shift? and you think that is good racing?

i have discussed this else where too...

http://www.celispeed.com/forum/topic.asp?TOPIC_ID=14480

i think the issue is a miscomunication of double clutching

to clarify starting from third

1.in third gear
2.clutch in
3.shift to N
4.clutch out
5.rev to match
6.clutch in
7.shift to 2nd
8 clutch out

vs.

1.in third gear
2.clutch in
3.rev matching
4.shift to 2nd
5.clutch out
imported_MartinGouda is offline  
Old 03-Oct-2003, 06:11 AM
  #56  
Registered User
 
imported_gatherer's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: on a race track
Posts: 17,846
that is it.... you are correct with the method... however in both cases if you look at the hand motion it's the same .... both have to pass through neutral to get to the next gear...

that being said it should (if you know what your doing) take the same amount of time to accomplish steps 2 to 8 of the double clutch as it does to run through steps 2 to 5 of the other method...

the extra steps in the double clutch is fast and fancy foot work that has to be accomplished... it has to be fast since you don't want to add time to you shift. and well that sort of coordination in my opinion is fancy
imported_gatherer is offline  
Old 16-Jul-2009, 07:35 AM
  #57  
Junior Member
 
hardtimz4ef's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2008
Posts: 27
just watch a video on youtube of drifters and you'll know why
hardtimz4ef is offline  
Old 16-Jul-2009, 02:22 PM
  #58  
Luka
 
shlammed's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2003
Posts: 14,319
dude
this thread is 6 years old...
shlammed is offline  
Old 16-Jul-2009, 03:47 PM
  #59  
Senior Member
 
Hatorade's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2008
Posts: 347
w00000w



talk about improper use of search...

btw...what happen to colorful members like those 2 guys???
Hatorade is offline  
Related Topics
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
JLCivixHBDX
Honda Civic (+ other) Parts/Accessories for Sale or Trade
0
05-Jan-2010 11:31 AM
RedNeckRiceBurner
CFz Discussion
10
20-Mar-2008 08:54 PM
DumbasSi
Chit-Chat
43
08-Feb-2006 11:25 AM
FS_WTB
Honda Civic (+ other) Parts/Accessories for Sale or Trade
0
31-Jul-2005 02:00 PM
imported_Gatsby
Honda Civic Meets and Events
3
27-Sep-2003 07:18 PM



Quick Reply: Why do "Heel-Toe" ??



All times are GMT -4. The time now is 10:06 AM.