Norm Peterson
corner barstool sitter
Sounds about right, or at least consistent . . . just use sloppy (slippy) clutch technique to cover for poor right-foot-vs-left foot coordination and hope that nobody notices how many things are being done wrong.Your left foot can correct this too...
Any time the revs aren't going to match when I'm about to downshift, I will rev-match that particular downshift. In actual practice, that's most of them going into 2nd, 3rd, 4th, or 5th (depending on which car I'm driving). On the street this is almost always a full double-clutch operation. On a road course/HPDE day it's not quite as clear-cut as that, being somewhere in between a simple rev-match with only one clutch pedal disengagement and two complete clutch disengagements. How do I know the revs won't match any given time? Dunno, but I guess after 40+ years of owning only MT cars it's like knowing how far you have to turn the steering wheel to stay in your lane around a curve or how hard to step on the brake pedal to get stopped - something you just develop a feel for.
Even if you don't care one way or the other about synchro life (which is finite, and they do wear more rapidly when asked to cover for greater amounts of rev mismatch inside the gearbox), it is smoother and less upsetting to the car if you make the rev-matching happen going down as well as up. Just for that reason, it's a good skill to have in your driving toolkit.
You need to find some real MT drivers to talk to, not just converted AT drivers who never had to even know about this stuff when they were learning to drive.Doesn't hurt the car at all. Nobody rev matches anymore lol
Norm
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