Syncro's don't like shifting by floating the gears, especially if your holding the shifter "feeling" them.
I've had 11 vehicles, 8 of them manuals. I think that meets the definition of an anachronism. Possibly me too.I've had 9 vehicles, 5 have been manual.
I learned on a 10hp IH Cub Cadet!I learned on a Hyster forklift...
The clutch in our '00 Jetta lasted at least 220K/14 years and was original when I sold it. I don't think I put a clutch in any of the manual vehicles I owned.I've had 11 vehicles, 8 of them manuals. I think that meets the definition of an anachronism. Possibly me too.
I currently have one 6 speed manual and one for single pedal driving. They're both enjoyable to drive, just different.
I've driven the manuals to high miles and only replaced one clutch, "while we were there" when the linkage broke.
Same here. Most the time it seems the rear main seal goes before the clutch goes.The clutch in our '00 Jetta lasted at least 220K/14 years and was original when I sold it. I don't think I put a clutch in any of the manual vehicles I owned.
After driving automatics most of his life, my dad decided he needed a 5-speed Accord in 1990 (his first manual car since his old VW Bug). I think his tendencies for cheapness prevailed here.... The car had no options whatsoever, No AC, no radio, no center armrest, no passenger's side mirror, etc. Anyway, I think 5 forward gears might've been more than he bargained for. He had a habit of shifting every thirty seconds or so, regardless of vehicle speed or RPM. He was constantly lugging along at 25 MPH in 5th gear. The engine was never in the power band.My grandpa taught me how to drive his Mazda Miata back when I was 17, so probably 20 years ago. I was basically learning how to drive and driving a stick at the same time lol. Anyways, my grandpa had some weird ways of driving. He believed that the more you used the clutch to shift, the faster it wore out. Anyways, he always had me go from 1,2 then rev it the engine a little more than you usually would and then put it into 5th gear.
I had an '80 that was exactly that spec. You're right, it really was an easy one to drive!I learned on dead easy 84 Jeep CJ7 with 4 speed with 4.2L straight six.
Yep, had a friend that bought a little Scion xA and he wore the clutch out by constantly shifting the thing way before it ever got into the power band, lugging the engine all the time. He apparently learned to drive a stick on some V8 truck, which has an entirely different power band than the tiny little 1.5L 4 cylinder in the xA. I explained to him what he was doing wrong after I rode with him in it one time and he was dumbfounded because he thought that he needed to get to the highest gear as fast as possible so he would get the best fuel economy. Yeah, no, not how this little engine works. Sometimes he would even start out in 2nd gear for no apparent reason at all. I was surprised the transmission lasted the 80K miles that it did.After driving automatics most of his life, my dad decided he needed a 5-speed Accord in 1990 (his first manual car since his old VW Bug). I think his tendencies for cheapness prevailed here.... The car had no options whatsoever, No AC, no radio, no center armrest, no passenger's side mirror, etc. Anyway, I think 5 forward gears might've been more than he bargained for. He had a habit of shifting every thirty seconds or so, regardless of vehicle speed or RPM. He was constantly lugging along at 25 MPH in 5th gear. The engine was never in the power band.
I once owned a Nova with a 3-on-the-tree, so I was able to demonstrate that skill somewhat amusingly when I was working at a construction site where the laborers there were provided with a Ford truck for their use hauling stuff around the site. At some point, the truck had to go to the shop for several days, so the company gave them an old beater to use in the meantime - a much older truck with a 3-on-the tree. Trouble was, none of that crew knew how to drive it! At some point, I mentioned I knew how to drive it, so for the next several days they would come to me once or twice a day and ask sheepishly if I can come move their truck for them. I was the youngest guy there, and working for a totally different company, but for those few days I was their hero.I got my first job @ pep boys when I was 19 because no employees at pep boys could test drive a truck with a 3 on the tree.