• Canopyflyer@lemmy.world
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    4 days ago

    As someone that literally spent 25 years driving a manual, including various stints in racing. Manuals have seen their day.

    It used to be if you wanted better mileage, you drove a manual. If you wanted to be faster on the track, drive a manual (caveat there is drag racing.)

    Today? The computer is just better at controlling a transmission. I drive a Camry Hybrid now and not having shifts is REALLY weird and the drone getting up to highway speeds is annoying, but I do like the 45mpg. Not to mention, when I sat down to learn how the Toyota Hybrid Drive works… It’s a pretty clever system.

    There are a lot of times that nostalgia gets the better of me and I wish I had a car with a manual. My oldest is possibly joining a skating team that is a 2 hour drive away. It’s tempting to let him use my car and then buy an older manual for myself as a toy. I’d love to get a hold of another mid-80’s Corolla GT-S. I autocrossed one back in the late 80’s early 90’s. It still remains my favorite car I’ve ever owned.

    • bananoidandroid@feddit.nu
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      4 days ago

      Same here . Obviously it does feel more like actually driving a car instead of a toy but to be honest, electric is here and they don’t shift. Today when i feel like doing some driving for the sake of driving- a motorcycle is much more fun anyway.

  • CptEnder@lemmy.world
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    5 days ago

    Manuals are infinitely more fun to drive and I like to manipulate the performance characteristics of the car myself but they’re probably going extinct to EV which is fine.

    • InputZero@lemmy.world
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      5 days ago

      Not just EVs, modern beltless CVTs and automatic transmissions make manual transmissions practically obsolete. With a wider set of gear ranges and way better performance and reliability they’re better in almost every way than a stick shift. That said, doesn’t matter how good a transmission is if it’s undersized for the engine, so I’m not say the transmission in any particular vehicle is good, just the tech has developed in recent years

      • jdeath@lemm.ee
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        5 days ago

        those transmissions are only better on paper. sure they could be theoretically better but in practice the transmission programming is to way over aggressively upshift in order to miser out a little more fuel economy on paper (but in practice they waste fuel)

        • InputZero@lemmy.world
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          4 days ago

          True, and as someone who’s been driving the same stick shift for almost 15 years now, you can take it from my cold dead hands. I haven’t seen anything with a beltless cvt, and I haven’t seen an automatic transmission I like more than my five speed, except in traffic. The tech exists, although it’s not available.

        • doingthestuff@lemy.lol
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          5 days ago

          Waste fuel, and they don’t always do what you want them to do, or sometimes lag before they do it.

  • Boomer Humor Doomergod@lemmy.world
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    6 days ago

    As a classically trained driver I’ve found automatics make people drive worse because they have to think less. And they already barely think.

    • baldingpudenda@lemmy.world
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      6 days ago

      Manual occupies their phone hand. How is someone supposed to heart content so the algorithm gives them more of it!

      Using the PRiNDle opens one up for so many activities.

    • "no" banana@lemmy.worldOP
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      6 days ago

      I’ve actually observed the opposite. Automatics leave more brain cells to focus on traffic.

      “Self driving” cars on the other hand…

    • Blaster M@lemmy.world
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      4 days ago

      Stupid is as stupid does. A significant portion of trucking accidents involve the truck driver missing a cue because they were mid gear change.

      While it is good to have a person learn to drive stick, it is really hard to get people to learn how to drive if they have zero interest in actually learning how to be a driver, no matter what transmission.

      I personally like dual clutch transmissions and daily’ed a car to 175k miles with one, yet I went out of my way to find a manual version of my current car.

    • Diplomjodler@lemmy.world
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      6 days ago

      Do you sing an aria by Mozart or something when you drive? But anyway, in my experience driving manual makes people more distracted because they have to think about gears and the clutch and stuff. Sure, a competent driver will not have any difficulty with that, but there’s an awful lot of them out there that don’t quite fall into that category.

      • MichaelScotch@lemmy.world
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        6 days ago

        You must not know how to drive a manual. When you know how to drive one, you don’t think about it. You just do it. You feel connected to the car and connected to the act of driving. Automatics absolutely allow people to go on autopilot and they focus on anything but driving: stuffing their face with food, browsing lemmy, texting, talking on their phone on speaker while holding it up to their mouth for some fucking reason even though it would be easier and better sound quality to just hold it up to their ear like phones were designed to be used, or you know, just use the fucking hands free phone calling that’s built into every fucking car that was made in the last decade and a half and included in every cheap ass aftermarket stereo system available on the planet

        • Diplomjodler@lemmy.world
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          5 days ago

          I’ve driven manual for over 30 years. Back in the day automatic transmissions were slow, clunky and inefficient. When I first tried modern one, I was instantly converted. Like, I also don’t want to manually adjust rotation speed on my washing machine, why would I do it in the car? Driving electric takes it to a whole new level. It just frees up mind share for concentrating on traffic. There’s no guarantee people will actually do that, of course. And if you think that things that are subconscious don’t take up mind share, you don’t know much about how the brain works. And if you think drivers on manual are less distracted, I have news for you too. I guess you live in the US, where driving manual is a choice. Here it’s mainly in cheaper, older cars which are driven by people who don’t much care about cars or driving.

    • sp3ctr4l@lemmy.zip
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      6 days ago

      I mean, I’ve driven only automatics my whole life, with the odd exception of a friend’s ATV or whatnot, but I know when and how to use an e brake (and/or dual foot the brake pedal and gas pedal) to start a car on an incline, when said car has an automatic transmission…

      EDIT: Also, most automatics will let you attempt a rolling start in neutral… I’ve done this many times, either rolling downhill or having people push.

      You’re not gonna uninvent automatic transmissions.

      Assuming you’re American (I doubt a non American would name themselves ‘Boomer Humor’), what you could do is mandate people completely retest, written and driving tests, for their liscenses every 5 years, then every 2 years after some age cutoff (60? 65?) then every single year after another age cutoff (70? 75?)… instead of just assuming that because they passed the test once in their life, all their skills and knowledge are perfect and up to date for the rest of their lives.

      Most people think they are much better drivers than they actually are, so lets actually reality check them on that.

      • Boomer Humor Doomergod@lemmy.world
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        6 days ago

        I would be so happy if we had stringent driving tests like in Europe. Hell, I’d gladly be re-tested every year if it meant people knew which lane to use and what turn signals were for.

        • sp3ctr4l@lemmy.zip
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          6 days ago

          Honestly, thats great to hear.

          American car-centric culture is literally directly killing people, killing the environment, killing our ability to design cities and public transit…

          You’d think the least we could do is be competent at driving.

          But fucking nope, not a chance.

          I used to live in Seattle.

          Almost no one understands that in significant rain, you need to double your following distance.

          Still fucking baffles me to this day. Rain City people don’t know how to drive… in the rain.

          • Boomer Humor Doomergod@lemmy.world
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            6 days ago

            A big reason why I’m all for public transport is to get people off the road who shouldn’t be there in the first place so they’re out of my way when I’m driving.

            Kind of like how I support new urbanism because it means less wilderness plowed under for suburbs, so I have more native habitat. I don’t want to live in a city, I just want most people to live in them so I can ve alone with my woodland friends.

            • jwmgregory@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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              6 days ago

              “… get people off the road who shouldn’t be there in the first place…”

              i get the sentiment but i think this is problematic.

              who deserves the right to drive then?

              i hear you, “people who are capable”. but real life isn’t so cut and dry. the way it works in america now is awful fs, you can back this up with death statistics fairly easily; however, i think this tribalistic “us vs them” attitude drivers get is emblematic of deeper problems in our culture.

              everyone is all for the animal farm until they’re the other. cliche, i know, but it’s true.

              • Boomer Humor Doomergod@lemmy.world
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                6 days ago

                Driving isn’t a right, it’s a privilege. And we determine who can drive by testing them to see if they know and will follow the rules.

                Plus the old dude I saw today with shaking hands and an oxygen tube in his nose deserves to have an alternative where he won’t kill himself or others.

                • jwmgregory@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                  6 days ago

                  oh yeah, it’s surely a privilege to be allowed to participate in society.

                  the argument “driving isn’t a right, it’s a privilege” falls entirely flat on its face when there exist no alternatives for a large majority of people and their lives. hardcore boomer energy that blatantly ignores the reality on the ground.

                  i agree, there are people who shouldn’t drive. i wish i didn’t have to drive.

                  that simply isn’t feasible in the current reality, tho.

                  driving can once again be a privilege only after it returns to no longer being a necessity. it is the natural right of all peoples to participate in their society. i agree with the sentiment, driving is a privilege that should be earned. but we should do ground work to make that true, we can’t just ignore the real world and indignantly say whatever we feel like; real life isn’t harry potter and the symbols and words we create bare no direct power over reality. driving is not a privilege in todays america, you don’t get to be the arbiter of decision here. in a practical sense, driving is necessary. the right to transportation and movement evolves with the age, man; it doesn’t get narrower as time goes on in the way a lot of western law seems to want to imply nowadays.

              • sp3ctr4l@lemmy.zip
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                6 days ago

                Death statistics?

                https://everytownresearch.org/graph/gun-death-vs-motor-vehicle-accident-deaths-since-1999/

                This source doesn’t go up to 2024, but only fairly recently have guns killed more Americans than cars, each year, and the overall numbers aren’t too far off.

                Cars certainly cause far more property damage than guns.

                Anyone in a car is easily capable of killing another human being or doing them massive injury.

                I agree with you that there are many more pervasive and complex issues … driving (sorry) Americans to be dangerous irresponsible drivers…

                But cars are deadly weapons, whether driven as such intentionally or unintentionally.

                Maybe people should be more stringently screened and qualified before they are allowed and trusted to regularly use them.

                For the record, I think you shouldn’t be able to own a firearm without having gone through a certification course, but as it stands right now, only 10 US states require that.

                https://everytownresearch.org/rankings/law/training-required-to-purchase-guns/

                All states require you complete a certification for concealed carry… but you don’t need that to legally buy and possess a gun.

          • Yeah, and all the morons from the Midwest stick their thumbs in their belt loops and insist that they really know how to drive in the snow, don’cha know, not like you coastal people.

            And yet there isn’t a single guardrail anywhere in Minnesota that hasn’t got a Chevy Suburban shoved halfway through it.

            • sp3ctr4l@lemmy.zip
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              6 days ago

              That would be especially funny coming from a Minnesotan aimed at … at least myself, as a Seattleite.

              For starters: It almost never seriously snows in Seattle, so we don’t have anywhere near as good an infrastructure for clearing snow.

              Not saying the average Seattleite is adept at snow driving… but… Seattle has A LOT of steep hills.

              I’m reasonably confident Minnesota is as flat as a pancake in comparison.

              (Checked. MN’s tallest ‘mountain’ is 2300 feet. WA’s is 14,000. Their ‘mountain’ is unironically what I would call a big hill. WA has almost 150 mountains taller than 2000 feet, by relative geographical prominence, not absolute height)

              A fairly small amount of snow, especially if it can be cold long enough to freeze into ice, and you’re looking at something like 30 to 40% of Seattle’s roads being either insanely dangerous, or roads that are cutoff by said chokepoints.

              I’m talking 18% to 22% grade.

              Apparently the steepest road in Minneapolis is ‘nearly’ 15%.

              -.-

              That is why a foot of snow basically shuts down Seattle.

              Now… going further…

              If you live in the PNW and actually try to see all the sights… aka, leave Seattle…

              Well you hit the fucking Cascade mountains, where it often snows considerably, the foothills have tons of smaller cities and rural communities with garbage tier snaking roads of extreme grade, and on the east side of the state, they get massive snow dumps all the time, though it is much more flat.

              So if you’ve actually driven or lived around a good deal of WA… you’ve probably had to encounter a lot more difficult snow conditions than an average MidWest driver.

    • Psythik@lemm.ee
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      5 days ago

      Person with back and knee issues here: worth it to not have to deal with a slushbox that won’t downshift when I need it to. I’ll never give up my manual.

      • Opisek@lemmy.world
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        5 days ago

        Eh, automatic cars will let you go into “manual” mode in which you tell it when to switch the gears. Mildly useful for steep hills to stop it from switching back and forth in some rare scenarios.

        • Psythik@lemm.ee
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          Not every automatic has that. Not to mention that there tends to be input lag when you hit the paddle, and there’s the fact that they won’t hold a gear when you need them to (instead they tend to automatically upshift right before redline). Manual mode is no substitute for a real manual.

          • Opisek@lemmy.world
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            5 days ago

            Just curious, what kind of terrain did you encounter that seem to cause such issues with wrongly shifting gears?

            • Psythik@lemm.ee
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              Flat asphalt.

              Like for example when you need to accelerate quickly to get around/avoid something. Most automatics I’ve driven will often shift into second too soon unless you drive aggressively, and absolutely refuse to drop back down to first gear—no matter how hard you stomp the accelerator pedal—even if there’s still plenty of room left in the rev range.

              • Ibuthyr@lemmy.wtf
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                You can usually change the driving mode from eco over comfort to sport. They all behave differently. And the there’s the kick down, that’ll definitely shift down unless the revs would be too high.

                I love driving manual, have done it since I was 18. But automatic transmissions nowadays are really good.

              • Opisek@lemmy.world
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                The only ones I’ve driven will not shift when you kick the gas pedal down, precisely to let you accelerate faster.

      • phx@lemmy.ca
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        Yeah I’ve got regular back and ankle issues. It’s annoying when they flare up but really not that bad. Unfortunately manuals are harder and harder to find so this will likely be my last

  • AA5B@lemmy.world
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    It’s been difficult to find manual transmisssions for a couple of decades here in the US. That ship has sailed.

    While most of my life I vowed my kids would learn manual, I gave up on that idea because

    • manual transmission cars are rare and disappearing
    • automatics now are more fuel efficient
    • CVT are reliable and even more efficient
    • EVs don’t shift

    My kids started driving in a world of automatics and will soon be in a world with no transmissions

        • lemming741@lemmy.world
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          The Prius system is a modern marvel and deserves a better name than eCVT.

          Belt type CVTs are trash. I don’t care that your Subaru has 57,000 trouble free miles, it’s going to die.

      • meathorse@lemmy.world
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        Belt CVTs - I’m right there with you, but take a look into the more modern geared CVTs such as Toyota e-CVT in their hybrids - I think Honda have a similar tech. It’s a planetary gear system that provides infinite gears without the rubber band feel that plagued belt CVTs and hella-reliable.

        https://youtu.be/vHc-_E8xWnM

        I’m a petrolhead at heart and would love more options for manuals but in lieu of that, a geared CVT is by far the next best transmission and 100x better than a traditional auto.

        Even better, jump in one and take it for a drive - because there are gears, it feels more connected to the motor - almost manual-like response and no sluggish delay like a traditional auto.

        You literally pick your revs by pushing the throttle more or less, they’re magic for hills or when the car is packed since you’re never waiting for revs to climb up into the power nor holding a speed because any faster and you have to change again which takes you out of the power again. If you want more power, you simply modulate that with the throttle and the revs rise instantly to accommodate.

        • lemming741@lemmy.world
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          5 days ago

          They’re good for go karts and for auto manufacturers that want their product to be worthless about time you pay it off.

      • AtHeartEngineer@lemmy.world
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        5 days ago

        I’ve had a Subaru CVT for 10+ years with over 200k miles no issues. Anecdotal yes, but I’ve grown fond of the CVT feel, it’s smooth, I like it.

    • JustAnotherKay@lemmy.world
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      6 days ago

      EVs don’t shift

      I know there’s no reason for them to, but a small part of me wishes there was. Something so satisfying about being good at managing gears

        • JustAnotherKay@lemmy.world
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          I’m not that into the idea, and the simulation kind of ruins what I’m after anyway. I want to feel it when I get a good/bad shift and I want it to matter.

          Sure, you can simulate the engine rumbling and the gears grinding. You can even rock the boat a bit with some hydraulics. When I shift “wrong” you can make me feel it for sure. But when I shift right, it’s not just smooth so that you can’t feel it. It’s smooth so that you can feel it ya know? (Okay maybe it wasn’t that smooth and what you’re really feeling is a slight clutch dump but wasn’t it fun)

      • AA5B@lemmy.world
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        5 days ago

        So true. I’ve never been more tempted to keep a classic car, even if it’s just an old shit box with manual transmission.

      • vaionko@sopuli.xyz
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        5 days ago

        I seem to recall some EV having a 2 speed transmission. A modern one, not like the Electrek that had a 5 speed manual

    • exasperation@lemm.ee
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      When I learned how to drive, manual transmissions were higher performance and better fuel efficiency: side by side comparisons of the exact same model of car would show better 0-60 and quarter mile times, while having slightly better EPA fuel efficiency ratings, for the manual transmission.

      At some point, though, the sheer number of gears in an automatic transmission surpassed those in the typical manual gearbox, and the average automatic today has 6 gears, up to 9 in some Mercedes and 10 in certain Ford and GM models. So they could start selecting gear ratios for better fuel efficiency, without “wasting” a valuable gear slot. There was a generation of Corvettes that was notorious for having a 6th gear that was worthless for actual performance but helped the car sneak by with a better highway fuel mileage rating.

      And the automatics became much faster at shifting gears, with even the ultra high performance supercars shifting to paddle shifters where the driver could still control the gear, but with the shifting mechanism automated. Ferrari’s paddle shifter models started outperforming the traditional stick shift models in the early 2000’s, if I remember correctly. As those gear shifting technologies migrated over to regular automatics, the performance gap shrunk and then ended up going the other way.

      At this point there’s not enough reason for a true manual stickshift transmission. It’s no longer faster or more economic, so it’s just a pure fun. Which is fine, but does make it hard to actually design one for any given model of car.

      • AA5B@lemmy.world
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        In the US it’s not really even cheaper - as in maybe you could save a couple hundred on a few models but most won’t offer a choice and it’s nothing in proportion to the cost of the car and the chances of finding one are so small it’s not even worth trying for most cars. There may be a few - are jeeps still available?

        My favorite car was a Miata with a stick (even though I’m too tall to fit) - maybe I need to track down an older one before they’re gone forever

      • Two2Tango@lemmy.ca
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        The Si and the R! They both sell like hotcakes, waited 8 months for my 2024 Si. I’m not sure why Honda doesn’t increase the volume, there’s still a lot of demand - maybe the margins aren’t as good as their SUVs :(

        • 474D@lemmy.world
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          Wow I had no idea, that’s crazy. I went with the 2024 sport touring because I do city driving 90% of the time, but that Si looked NICE

      • AA5B@lemmy.world
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        6 days ago

        I bought a civic in 2006 and it took 6 weeks to get one. A manual would have taken much longer

    • nexas_XIII@lemm.ee
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      6 days ago

      Had a manual 2016 Mazda 3. Took a bit to find it with all the options I wanted but it was available at the time.

  • Polderviking@feddit.nl
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    You’ll never catch me doing something that can be automated away, this includes shifting gears in a car.

    But a car is just a tool to me, like a cordless drill, so i’m sure I don’t get it.

    • henfredemars@infosec.pub
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      As a programmer, I am more than happy automating a task for which I will never recoup my automation time investment.

      It’s the principle of the thing.

      • jdeath@lemm.ee
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        as a senior programmer (with limited, valuable time), i exercise good judgement before wasting weeks on unused automations.

        “measure twice, cut once” as the craftsmen used to say. or YAGNI

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      It’s not like you can use that time freed by automating gear shifting for something else.

      It’s a tool, yes, but personally, I like having more control over tools I use. I’d choose a cordless drill that I can set the torque control myself over one that doesn’t have that option.

      • Polderviking@feddit.nl
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        5 days ago

        It doesn’t free up time no but it does make driving ever so slightly less involved.

        Controls on a drill have a clear practical purpose, and to my knowledge they don’t make them that do that automatically in a reasonable price range. I would totally buy that if they did. ;-)

        • jdeath@lemm.ee
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          and by making driving less involved, we free up drivers to play on their phones while going 70mph down the highway. progress!

    • "no" banana@lemmy.worldOP
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      I totally understand people who like the whole ritual of the manual car. Hell, that’s how I feel about music making. But there’s something to be said for just getting something to happen without much effort.

      • Rekorse@sh.itjust.works
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        Just because you need to learn something additional does not mean driving a manual requires more effort in any substantial way. Its more effort than 0, but it is not taxing or hard to drive a manual when you are used to it. I do not think about pushing the clutch in or shifting, I just do it.

        I will say dont ever drive a manual if you will be in stop and go traffic for long periods of time regularly though. Im personally never in it.

    • Snowclone@lemmy.world
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      5 days ago

      Pretty much every consumer in every auto market agrees with you. There are downsides to manual, you can grind a transmission’s gears to dust in a couple of days if you do it wrong, you really can’t trust someone to drive your car at all, you are much more actively driving, so you’re paying more attention, but you’re also more stressed, if you’re in bumper to bumper traffic, you will have to do the most difficult aspects of driving every few seconds to inch along for a half hour or more and that’s REALLY shitty, if you need to stop on any kind of hill, you have to be aware your gonna need half a car length or more to get into gear where your just going to be falling down that hill while you convince yourself you don’t need to panic and you will catch the gear before you’re past the point of no return. You get better mileage, you get better control, you pay attention more, you focus more, but it’s not all roses, the risks usually aren’t worth it for modern car buyers.

      • Dasus@lemmy.world
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        5 days ago

        your gonna need half a car length or more to get into gear

        my arsehole just clenched tight for any car you’ve ever driven. eugh. you let a car fall back half a car length before the biting point? that’s literally a ton of pressure on it. you’re way better off giving too much gas and too little clutch than letting the car fall half a length backwards bro. the former will perhaps stress your clutch slightly but it won’t fuck with your gears like the latter

        like a chinese burn vs a broken bone

          • Dasus@lemmy.world
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            Soo… that means you had room behind your car, so you we’re never forced to learn how to do it without letting the car move.

            Try an uphill start with shitty winter tires in traffic when the car barely stays still with your brakes on while you’re stopped at a 30 degree incline in lights.

            You learn that it’s better to slightly antagonise the clutch (we call it “pissing” the clutch, but “bullshitting” would be a more accurate translation as per the meaning of “kusettaa”.) So youre sort of “cheating”, but what you can’t do is let the car move backwards.

            Not only does it make it way worse for the gearbox, it also ruins your chances at having traction in a scenario such as I described.

            In Finland you literally have to spend a day on slippery course before getting your permanent licence. It’s ice and water in the winter and oil and soap in the summer. And there too, the instructors may be like, “hey stop here on this uphill.”

            Also, whenever doing conscription and driving military trucks in a convoy, you really can’t let the vehicle fall half a length.

            That’s just bad driving.

            I’m sure you’re a good manual driver… for an American.

      • Hadriscus@lemm.ee
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        Starting on a slope isn’t particularly hard, you have to make use of the handbrake

        • jdeath@lemm.ee
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          somebody failed to read the meme i guess, it’s literally right there

      • Sylvartas@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        Not saying you’re wrong in general but

        if you need to stop on any kind of hill, you have to be aware your gonna need half a car length or more to get into gear where your just going to be falling down that hill while you convince yourself you don’t need to panic and you will catch the gear before you’re past the point of no return

        My shitty Toyota Aygo has a hill start assist thing and it works very well. Basically when you release the brake at 0 km/h it holds it for a few seconds or until you reach the slip point of your first gear. Also handbrake start is right there in the OP, (and a mandatory part of drivers ed over here)

  • JordanZ@lemmy.world
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    I still hate to this day one of my parents cars. The gear shift is on the side of the radio and the radio controls(what isn’t touch screen) are underneath.

  • FelixCress@lemmy.world
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    US: predominantly automatic transmission, low speed limits

    Germany: predominantly manual transmission, higher speed limits and no limits on around half of autobahns (motorways)

    US road deaths per capita twice of Germany.

    Draw your own conclusions.

    • Bumblefumble@lemm.ee
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      Probably more related to the god-awful infrastructure design in the US, like stroads and an unfathomable tendency to use stop signs for a lot of things they are just not fit for, like to replace speed bumps, chicanes, and roundabouts.

      Also the better comparable statistic should be deaths per distance traveled in cars.

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        Here is the list 6.9 vs 4.2 deaths per 1 billion km. 12.8 vs. 3.35 per 100’000 inhabitants.

        But you need both for a fuller puncture, not everyone involved/dieing is in a vehicle.

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        Not to mention the DUI rates in the US are astronomical. Over 1/3 of motor fatalities are alcohol related in the US.

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        Chicanes are the best part about riding a sport bike! I get to drag knees on public roads!

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          Public roads are not a racetrack. You never know when there’s going to be a kid chasing a ball or something around the corner.

        • uniquethrowagay@feddit.org
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          You think this is something? You think this is bad? This? This chicanery? He’s done worse. That billboard! Are you telling me that a man just happens to fall like that? No! He orchestrated it! Jimmy! He defecated through a sunroof! And I saved him! And I shouldn’t have. I took him into my own firm! What was I thinking? He’ll never change. He’ll never change! Ever since he was 9, always the same! Couldn’t keep his hands out of the cash drawer! But not our Jimmy! Couldn’t be precious Jimmy! Stealing them blind! And he gets to be a lawyer!? What a sick joke! I should’ve stopped him when I had the chance! And you - you have to stop him!

    • Sludgeyy@lemmy.world
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      6 days ago

      Quick Google

      In 2024 36% of Germans reported using the car daily.

      In 2023 95.3% of Americans older than 16 drive on occasions.

      83 million Germans, 63% above 16

      340 million Americans, 65% above 16

      52 million potential drivers in Germany, 17 million actually drive

      221 million potential drivers in America, 210 million drive daily

      17 million vs 210 million daily drivers

      ~12x more drivers, only 2x more death

      Per capita isn’t really a way to look at it

      Besides automatic cars or lack of a manual transmission is not causing accidents.

      Chance of death goes up significantly with speed

      No one has ever crashed because they couldn’t go over the speed limit

      • MisterFrog@lemmy.world
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        Downvoters mad to find out cars are inherently unsafe and need very good infrastructure and to be remotely safe.

        Downvoters mad that Ek= ½mv2, and speed, funnily enough, is dangerous.

        Downvoters mad that manual transmission isn’t making cars safer.

        Car go vroom vroom, but public transport go better

        Fax

      • BorgDrone@lemmy.one
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        83 million Germans, 63% above 16

        Not sure why you think this is relevant. Children aren’t allowed to drive in Germany.

        • Sludgeyy@lemmy.world
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          Well you can start driving in US at 15

          Like I said quick Google

          Even less Germans driving, proves my point more

          Germans only really drive if they are willing and able

          Americans are forced to drive

          Car deaths in America aren’t happening because they have automatic transmissions and can’t drive as fast as they want.

          Just the seer amount of drivers, more cars on roads to crash into, and less willing and able drivers.

          • BorgDrone@lemmy.one
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            No, crashes in the US happen because Americans are shit drivers. They are shit drivers because you get a free driving license with box of cereal. Germany on the other hand has one of the strictest driving tests there is. A German with a driving license has had many hours of instruction from a professional instructor.

            In addition, American cars are shit. Lots of poorly maintained and unsafe vehicles on the road with very lax regulation. By contrast, German cars have to pass a very comprehensive yearly safety inspection.

  • Mr.Mofu@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    • Wanted to Start on a Steep Hill? We had a Tool for that: it was Called “Flooring the Gas while letting go off the Clutch”

    IT AIN’T NO GOOD MORNIN’ WITHOUT THE SMELL OF NICELY BURNED CLUTCH

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      I was going to say, I always had my e-brake on when I parked my car and so I always started the car with it on.

      Does he mean slowly let off the clutch while releasing the e-brake? Does he put on his e-brake if he stops on a hill, in traffic too!

      • Suck_on_my_Presence@lemmy.world
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        I’ve had to use the ebrake method before for a hill that was wayyyy too steep and a fence gate closed behind me.

        You basically just let off the clutch and press on the gas until the car wants to move forward, then you let off the e brake and go without going backwards.

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        If you’re on a steep hill, yes sometimes you need to use the handbrake to get moving. This had to be demonstrated when I got my licence, but to be fair some manual vehicles now have automatic hill start. Still a good technique to learn because it doesn’t always activate.

    • shalafi@lemmy.world
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      We’d park my buddies Mustang on a hill wherever we went in case it wouldn’t start. LOL, everyone made fun of him saying it was a Pinto. (<- it was this, but really, really shitty)

  • 4shtonButcher@discuss.tchncs.de
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    Big oil forced that shit onto you instead of going the far superior EV route from the beginning. Now EVs are finally taking over and I’m happy my kids never have to get fuel grease on their hands and suffer those nasty fumes at gas stations. Shifters were needed for an inferior technology to work. I liked it as an experience when I learned to drive. But cars are mostly transport due to failure of better public transport infrastructure. I don’t care whether they’re fun. I drive for fun on the Xbox or maybe in a GoKart every few years.

    Oh that felt good to rant.

    • SkunkWorkz@lemmy.world
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      EVs weren’t viable for long distance travel before though. Like batteries didn’t have the energy density they have today. The advancements in battery tech relied heavily on the advancements in computing tech. Like for battery research, manufacturing, battery management. And research in computer technology has never stopped.

      Even if they never stopped making electric cars, they would have stayed short distance vehicles for a long time since battery tech didn’t advance fast enough. We might have gotten long distance EVs a decade sooner but definitely not decades. And fast charging is also only possible because of miniaturization of computer chips, nobody would’ve bought an EV that can travel less than 100km and take a full day to charge for their primary mode of transportation .

    • Turret3857@infosec.pub
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      5 days ago

      Except they made sure you couldn’t repair it so You’ll end up dropping that 50k once every 5-10 years anyway 🤪

      (Im pro-EV btw. just wish EVs were pro-me)

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        You know that there’s shops all over the place who will fix cells in bad packs? Replacing the whole battery is FUD similar to warning someone they need to replace their whole engine if there’s any issue.

        • Turret3857@infosec.pub
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          Not talking about replacing the battery, I’m talking about every part having an encrypted module that only the dealership has the key to, meaning only the dealership can replace the part.

          edit: and also the fact that most of them have that stupid giant tablet instead of buttons, and spy on you without consent.

          edit 2: the other reply proved my point. you shouldnt have to take your car to the dealer for repairs. You should be able to do it yourself if you wanted to. The dealer shouldnt own a repair monopoly.

            • Turret3857@infosec.pub
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              It isnt, but unless you sink the price of a new car into an EV-conversion kit, the only options are older gas cars for consumer-friendliness unfortunately.

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        5 days ago

        IME, (2019 Volt) maintenance costs are lower with a PHEV. I have needed to take it to a dealer to deal with a OBD2 code that neither I nor my local mechanic could resolve, but the replacement part and labor was reasonably priced.

        • Turret3857@infosec.pub
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          5 days ago

          As a right to repair advocate, the fact you had to take it to the dealer is a turn off for me. I’ll be driving my 03 shit box til it dies or I move to a country with good public infrastructure

          • bss03@infosec.pub
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            Eh, I had to take my Saturn (previous vehicle) to the dealer several times. The car before that was ruined by a “shade-tree” mechanic, so when I lived in the same city as the dealer I preferred that.

            I’m with you on right-to-reapir tho. It would have been better if the diagnostic methods and parts were available from other than the dealer (and maybe they were and the local guy just didn’t want to mess with it, doesn’t do a lot of EVs at his shop). But my experience with cars is mostly that dealers have that advantage whether you go electric or not, and I prefer electric.

            Still let me know if I can do something to improve right to repair for me or others.

            • Turret3857@infosec.pub
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              5 days ago

              Other than writing your Congress-people (lol) or donating to non-profits that support Right to repair I have nothing at the moment. In my (limited) experience it seems that most cars built after 2010 have some sort of “only the dealership” type thing built in, so at the moment its kind of just “buying used”. Ive been considering getting an early model Prius when my car goes (pre 2015) but, depending on how the rest of this presidency plays out I may not even be in the country.

    • MystikIncarnate@lemmy.ca
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      With Tesla burning right now (sometimes literally), I’m concerned for the future of EVs.

      There are other EV-only makers, most notably in my mind, rivian, but not many others come to mind.

      Most other manufacturers have either stopped making EVs entirely, or switched to hybrid, or hybrid adjacent technologies. Honda is a good example of this backpedaling. They dipped their collective toes into EVs with proper hybrid vehicles during the pre-pandemic years. Between 2015 and 2020 (ish) they had a PHEV, the clarity. It was discontinued in 2020. I forget if the last model year was 2019 or 2020. Either way, I still kind of want one… Regardless, they took everything they learned and put it into their fancy new e-CVT, which essentially, at most speeds, turns the gasoline motor of the vehicle into a generator, powering an electric motor that drives the wheels.

      Don’t get me wrong, that’s still more efficient than burning the Jurassic forests to drive motion, but it’s not as efficient as running the drive motor from batteries that were charged from green sources.

      Most other manufacturers have done something similar in abandoning BEVs for HEVs or whatever Honda is doing. There’s a few stand out exceptions, like the F150 lightening. Good on you Ford… But the list is pretty short, especially compared to the fuel based alternatives.

      It’s a good time for other companies to pick up the ball that Tesla dropped here, and I’m hoping they do. … I mean, they won’t because they’re too busy buying yachts with all that fossil fuel bribe money they get, but I can dream.

      • ayyy@sh.itjust.works
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        BYD is doing just fine, your shitty protectionist government just won’t allow you to buy them.

      • yunxiaoli@sh.itjust.works
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        BYD and xiaomi produce more EVs than American manufacturers produce vehicles in total.

        The future of EVs is secure and the majority of drivers on earth will be driving one by 2050. Just not in the US, Canada, UK or other failed states.

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        Apart from China, Hyundai/Kia is producing really great EVs. And the German brands have viable ones that might eventually catch up to Korea and China now that they’re taking it more seriously. Renault is really getting it lately and even Stellantis is coming with new platforms that are pretty good. The Japanese have invested more in anti-EV-propaganda than in EVs.

        We have a Hyundai Kona from 2019 and it’s an amazing car. Every single person who ever tried it never wants to drive an ICE again. And this is an old low-to-mid-end vehicle. Our next EV is definitely going to be a lot better.

        • MystikIncarnate@lemmy.ca
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          3 days ago

          My only real personal problems with EVs, have nothing to do with them being electric.

          Early EVs all looked like science experiments… I’ll give some examples. The Nissan leaf. The BMW i3. And a more recent example is the VW ID.Buzz mini bus thing.

          I want a car, not a statement piece, and until recently, Tesla seemed to be the only ones selling EVs that didn’t look dramatically different than other cars on the road. I just want a car. I want it to use volts instead of gasoline.

          The second issue I have has more to do with the automobile market than EVs… Everyone seems to have a sport crossover or SUV converted to EV, but very few have just plain sedans, and those that do, a nontrivial number of them violate the first complaint.

          I like EVs, I want to drive an EV, but I don’t want it to look like it’s straight out of someone’s LSD trip. That’s just not groovy man … I’m not a fan of SUVs, I just want a small sedan or coupe that’s normal except it uses batteries instead of Jurassic remains.

          • 4shtonButcher@discuss.tchncs.de
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            Well, our Kona is a weird crossover-y thing but otherwise literally identical to its ICE brothers.

            Maybe Peugeot, Citroen and similar are what you are after? The new Peugeot 308 electric is pretty “boring” - it’s not an amazing EV but better than what they had before

            • MystikIncarnate@lemmy.ca
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              Unfortunately Peugeot and Citroen are not names I’ve ever seen for cars sold here.

              I have, of course, heard of both mentioned at some point, but here in Canada, neither seem to be brands we can buy. I’m not sure why that is, I have never felt the need to look into it.

              Our major players are GM, Ford, Honda, Hyundai, Toyota, Nissan, Mazda, BMW, Mercedes, VW, Kia, and all their subsidiaries (off the top of my head). Not sure if I missed any major ones there… There is of course some more niche companies but they’re not really on my radar, so to speak… I’ve also omitted Tesla on purpose for obvious reasons.

              Hyundai only has hybrid sedans, some plug in hybrid, which is better than most, beyond that we’re stuck with mostly SUVs and light trucks as EVs, or whatever designer-looking monstrosity someone wants to release… The story seems to be the same across all major players, to the point where I just kind of gave up the search a few years back, for the most part. Anything I’ve looked up or looked at since seems to follow the same trends.

              • 4shtonButcher@discuss.tchncs.de
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                2 days ago

                Did you see the Hyundai Ioniq 6? Or the very new Kia EV4? They look very “modern” but then again I’d say ICE cars are constantly changing design too.

                • MystikIncarnate@lemmy.ca
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                  7 hours ago

                  ICE cars are absolutely changing designs all the time. There are plenty of ICE car designs that I don’t like too.

                  The difference is that generally there will be a couple of EV designs, but there will be a dozen ICE designs. There’s simply more to pick from on the ICE side. So if I want something that fits a design aesthetic, I have a much better chance to find it as an ICE car than an EV.

                  I widely considered the model S to be a great EV design for a really long time, though I swore I wouldn’t buy one. Before the whole Elon Musk drama recently, my main reasons were about how they treated after market/used/rebuilt vehicles, owners, and anyone with the gall to dare try to fix their own vehicle… And also the “walled garden” of Tesla. Making it difficult or impossible to get something like a third party charger for home, among a long list of other complaints.

                  I’ve been aware of the writing on the wall with Tesla for a while, and I reserved judgement for the most part, only committing to not placing myself in that situation, and thinking that anyone who can accept what I will not, does so at their own risk. It brings me no joy to see that I was right on most fronts. They still have some wonderful designs.

                  Largely, the S stands out… Especially early S models. More recent models started to trend into basically being larger model 3 vehicles; I don’t like a few of the key design features of the model 3. Specifically, I don’t like that you have a barren dashboard. There’s nothing in front of you. The S had a driver information screen that showed all the usual things, like your speed, energy remaining, trip, odometer, etc. All the things that you would expect from an instrument cluster. I wasn’t a HUGE fan of the middle screen for infotainment, but as long as it was limited to noncritical features and infotainment, I’m mostly okay with it (mainly that it has no physical buttons) provided that the critical driving components, features and controls were separate.

                  I acknowledge that this is entirely a personal preference.

                  Bluntly, if Tesla as a company wasn’t as exclusionary to other EVs and manufacturers, and treated DIY/used/repair markets fairly, I might already be driving one. Obviously, even if they completely change all of their policies and evict the guy at the top, I’m not going for a Tesla… Even then, I’m pretty on the fence given that they’re burned at this point (aka cancelled).

                  I’m keeping an eye out for something, I’ll probably stick with the vehicle I have four now unless I can get a great deal on a used PHEV like the Honda clarity (which is now discontinued, RIP). There’s a few oddities about the clarity I don’t like, but on the whole it looks like a solid car. The rear tires being partially covered is odd IMO.

                  In any case, I can’t really afford to get a new car at this point, maybe late this year things will change on that front, but given the state of the economy, inflation and average earnings, things might get worse too. Financially I have two major events happening around October that might make it possible to buy a new car: we will be able to update our mortgage (hopefully with a lower cost), and I’m on track to pay off a major debt I have. If I have my finances under control and in a good place when both of those happen, then I may start looking around for a vehicle again, provided the economy doesn’t go down the toilet by then.

                  I don’t have confidence that the economy will be good by then because since I’m in Canada, the United States and their insane commander and chief, can absolutely put our economy into a downward trend.

                  I’m not putting my money on it being fine. I’m going to get myself into a better position before I reassess.

                  Regardless, if you’ve read my ramblings this far down, you have my respect. I hope you have a wonderful day, and I look forward to talking with you again in the future on here. Be well.

  • riquisimo@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    Electric cars have no transmission. If you buy electric, there are no stick shifts because electric cars only have one gear (with very few exceptions, and even then you’d just have 2 gears.)

    Idk how this plays into the joke, but it’s a neat fact.

    • prayer@sh.itjust.works
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      Technically they have at least 2 “gears”, forward and reverse. But does it really count if all you do is shout at the angry pixies to run the other way?

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    Daddy needs his coffee.

    Seriously, the automatic is so much better for using a truck as a tool. I still drive a stick right now and I’m lucky I miss rush hour most days because we start and end early, one job site.

    I’d never choose a manual for dealing with taking tools and materials around the Metro while the assholes I’m trying to service cut me off in stop and go traffic.

    And IMO we need to start racing EVs, leave combustion for the 20th century old timer events

    oshit I have been bamboozled by a shitpost

    • chiliedogg@lemmy.world
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      I love my automatic transmission and cruise control, but I do think that I may have been a better driver when I drove stick. By necessity, I had to pay closer attention to the road than I have to today.

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        It helps you become more innately aware of your speed. Gear (which you know either by remembering which one you last shifted to or by touching your shifter) and rpm (which you know by ear and responsiveness) are enough (once you become familiar enough with the vehicle) to have a good idea of how fast you’re going without even glancing at the speedometer.

        Also engine braking gives more control over speed and I’m used to doing it, so can add the action to emergency situations without having to think about it so much.

        Though the comparison is different when the paddle shifters are involved. I still prefer stick shift over that semi-auto style, but see that as more of a personal preference than technically superior. If anything, semi-auto is probably the superior one.

        Though I’d also add the caveat of the technical differences between all three not being significant overall in practical terms. The biggest difference is probably just that driving MT takes additional skill that not everyone has or is comfortable learning/using. Which is nice as an anti theft feature but can be annoying if you want to trade off driving but the other drivers can’t drive your vehicle.

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    5 days ago

    You’re like a solid 20 years behind here bud, they don’t even offer manual transmissions on high end luxury cars. People don’t buy them. I get it, I miss having manual cars, and it’s not as hard as people always complained, I could teach a dog to drive manual over the phone, it’s really not hard.

      • boonhet@lemm.ee
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        5 days ago

        they don’t even offer manual transmissions on high end luxury cars

        Honda

        Hmm.

        • Snowclone@lemmy.world
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          5 days ago

          No they have a pretty solid point here, the expensive Honda are selling majority manual, the budget friendly Honda sell close to zero, but you can often only get manual on those models by paying for multiple upgrades that push the price so close to the more expensive models you would clearly just move up.

    • Rekorse@sh.itjust.works
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      5 days ago

      There are plenty of cars offering manual transmission, its just not available for every CSR out there. If you want to have fun with it you can.