I'm not altogether experienced with manual transmissions, but I have used these common sense things with my '99 Ford Contour, and it's made it to 120,000 miles without any troubles...
1) Use the brakes to stop- slowing by downshifting only is fun and you can get better performance doing it, but it doubles (or more) the wear on the clutch, and is unsafe in traffic. Drivers behind you don't know you're braking because your brake lights don't go on. Brakes are cheaper than a clutch.
2) Let the synchros do their job- don't slam the stick into gear. This causes the synchros to work very hard, very fast, creating more heat and wear. On my transmission, I just lightly touch the gearshift to the next gear, and after a half second or so it just slips right into gear because the synchros have been allowed to do their job.
1) Use the brakes to stop- slowing by downshifting only is fun and you can get better performance doing it, but it doubles (or more) the wear on the clutch, and is unsafe in traffic. Drivers behind you don't know you're braking because your brake lights don't go on. Brakes are cheaper than a clutch.
2) Let the synchros do their job- don't slam the stick into gear. This causes the synchros to work very hard, very fast, creating more heat and wear. On my transmission, I just lightly touch the gearshift to the next gear, and after a half second or so it just slips right into gear because the synchros have been allowed to do their job.