Vet time, and I'm parked in by T$ and my upstairs neighbor. I don't want to bother her, but his car's a stick... I think I can move it w/o stalling too many times. Stalling's more likely than grinding gears at least, so at least I won't damage his car. :-P Clothes first, that's important. Yay, I get to try stick again. Um, that's a good thing right?
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asterroc
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Date: 2007-09-01 05:19 pm (UTC)The computers can make decisions faster, but lack the ability to evaluate all of the variables of a situation. My old ford and every automatic of my mom's I've driven would downshift to accelerate (thereby wasting fuel) when it wasn't necessary (like going from 55-65 on a highway, or downwhifting to near the redline of 2nd gear to accelerate). Also, shift times for modern automatics still lag behind a manual for economy cars (yes high end sport program automatic transmissions have very fast shift times, but those are in cars costing 40-50k+) meaning power is wasted during those times more in the auto. The different engine noise would be a different exhaust system, meaning the comparison is no longer apples to apples. Same equipment and ear ratios, the manual can always have better mileage.
I agree shifting won't keep a driver more awake, but the fact that a driver must interact with their car on a much more regular basis helps them remain focused on driving. I know personally driving an auto makes me feel much less involved, and more prone to "road hypnosis," and I know a number of other people feel the same way.
And from what you said, you're familiar with why knowing how to drive a manual is important. It really becomes 2nd nature to shift with a little practice. Whne I got in an accident in an auto I actually moved my hand to shift.
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Date: 2007-09-01 05:29 pm (UTC)Maybe when I get a hybrid years and years in the future it'll be a stick.
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Date: 2007-09-02 04:24 pm (UTC)Grinding gears usually means that you are either not depressing the clutch enough before shifting, or not letting it up before hitting the gas. I know a lot of people who have bought a junker and sold it a month later to learn to drive a manual.
I still favor diesels to hybrids. Similar fuel economy (compare the VW new beetle TDi to the civic hybrid or the prius), and technology that has been proven for over a century, and is far cheaper to fix. Sadly only VW sells a diesel in the states. I wish we got some of the cool european diesels. They've been getting 50mpg for a long time. They need to share the love. One of my coworkers was an earlier adopter of the prius, and we're all waiting to see how much he is going to have to pay to get his battery system fixed.