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Tsikoteer
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December 17th, 2018 09:07 AM #71
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Tsikoteer
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December 17th, 2018 09:10 AM #72
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December 17th, 2018 09:29 AM #73
I'm on the same boat as you, bro! I don't know where people get the idea that modern ATs are boring and unresponsive.
If I'm on the hunt for a weekend MT car, I would look into, at least, a WRX MT.
Some manufacturers have these automated MTs but I have tried them. Peugeot is one these manufacturers.
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December 17th, 2018 10:08 AM #74
Can't even remember the last time I drove a manual car.
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Tsikoteer
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December 17th, 2018 10:46 AM #75Guess they just havent had the opportunity to experience them.
ALL R&D is being devoted to traditional automatics (i. E. Torque converters, dual clutch transmissions, CVTs etc.)
None is being invested in manuals. Zero.
Automatics have been and will continue to be the future of transmissions.
Sales figures, development $, etc etc have long spelled the demise of the manual.
Sure people can have their individual preferences etc. To each his own. But the automakers have decided where their R&D budgets and manufacturing capacity are going to. And you can bet their decision making is based on empirical evidence, real world statistics and facts and end user preference.
Sent from my SM-N950F using Tapatalk ProLast edited by EQAddict; December 17th, 2018 at 11:41 AM.
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December 17th, 2018 11:42 AM #76
I agree. Cars are terrible money pits. It's funny when sales agents keep calling them "investments". Aside from devaluation, so many costs attached to owning and maintaining a car. It's just that our current infrastructure makes it impossible to get around without one. Am subscribed to the idea that while we're all suffering in traffic, bad road conditions and sharing the road with terrible drivers, might as well do it with a bit of comfort. But at the same time I do appreciate a no frills, easy to maintain bare bones, honest to goodness point A to B car that won't break the bank.
Things are changing though. With a lot of car makers going full electric in the future, a lot of autonomous driving tech and amenities seems to be trickling down to even the entry level models. The brake hold function I mentioned is already in the entry level CR-V.
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Verified Tsikot Member
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December 17th, 2018 12:20 PM #77
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December 17th, 2018 12:54 PM #78
many don't know how to shift appositely on a manual tranny
Gay Bus Driver - YouTube
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Tsikoteer
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December 17th, 2018 12:58 PM #79Not necessarily true. Better clutches, Rev matching on downshifts, lighter transmissions, better feel, stronger shift forks, automated manuals, etc are all avenues of development that can be pursued.
Just saying that all the automakers and all the R&D has moved on and away from manuals except for 1 off performance variants and econo applications.
The question on this thread is which is a more fuel efficient and comfortable transmission. I believe this has been answered by the direction of the automakers themselves.
Unless we know something that their own engineering, r&d, market research, finance and sales teams do not.
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December 17th, 2018 01:21 PM #80
Automatic transmissions has gotten better nowadays that they are almost at par with their manual counterpart when it comes to efficiency.
10-15 years ago they were so awful that the obvious choice was manual. But now times have changed.
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