Pre loading the gearbox
Pre loading the gearbox
Author
Discussion

BigNige

Original Poster:

2,584 posts

246 months

Sunday 17th June 2007
quotequote all
...before a change - makes for a faster change but does/could it damage the box?

stevieturbo

17,940 posts

269 months

Monday 18th June 2007
quotequote all
do you really think it makes it faster ? and how fast do you need to change gear ?

Is trying strange ideas, really worth potential damage ?

BigNige

Original Poster:

2,584 posts

246 months

Monday 18th June 2007
quotequote all
stevieturbo said:
do you really think it makes it faster ? and how fast do you need to change gear ?

Is trying strange ideas, really worth potential damage ?


What's strange about trying things?

Why do you think I asked the bloody question?

slackalice

421 posts

253 months

Monday 18th June 2007
quotequote all
BigNige said:
...before a change - makes for a faster change but does/could it damage the box?
Not sure what you mean, do you mean blipping the throttle on the up change ? if so I don't think that you need to as the flywheel is so heavy that the revs don't drop that amount ( if at all ), and the torque will kick in anyway and propel you forward at a steady rate of knots.

If you do want to blip on the up change, (and this is something that I have had to learn not to do with this car) all that will happen is the UJ's will clonk, and if the rears don't light up in between changes then the clutch will give out.


BigNige

Original Poster:

2,584 posts

246 months

Monday 18th June 2007
quotequote all
My bad, should have explained myself better.

Accelerate, put pressure on the gear stick ready for the next gear, dip clutch and change - change is deffo quicker than the normal way of driving.

Demolition Man

1,050 posts

275 months

Monday 18th June 2007
quotequote all
Isn't that how you change gear anyway? - or am I missing something?

..... edited to say... I think I know what you mean now.... But I'd rather have 2 hands on the wheel if accelerating hard.

Edited by Demolition Man on Monday 18th June 13:13

slackalice

421 posts

253 months

Monday 18th June 2007
quotequote all
BigNige said:
My bad, should have explained myself better.

Accelerate, put pressure on the gear stick ready for the next gear, dip clutch and change - change is deffo quicker than the normal way of driving.
Right got ya, then the answer is yes, The selectors will wear out very quickly, they are normally made from a phos/bronze and are meant to be in the neutral position in the box held there by detent's on the rail until they are needed. It is for that reason you should never drive with one hand on the gear stick.

madazrx7

5,824 posts

239 months

Monday 18th June 2007
quotequote all
Demolition Man said:
..... edited to say... I think I know what you mean now.... But I'd rather have 2 hands on the wheel if accelerating hard.

Edited by Demolition Man on Monday 18th June 13:13
Exactly! I get quite worried by drivers who leave their hand on the gearstick for any longer than the fraction of a second it takes to change gear. Why do they do it? Hand should go straight back to the wheel...

bennno

14,848 posts

291 months

Monday 18th June 2007
quotequote all
BigNige said:
My bad, should have explained myself better.

Accelerate, put pressure on the gear stick ready for the next gear, dip clutch and change - change is deffo quicker than the normal way of driving.
Good call, and to totally stuff your gearbox keep your foot firmly on the accelerator whilst doing so to gain an additional nanosecond.

Bennno

BigNige

Original Poster:

2,584 posts

246 months

Monday 18th June 2007
quotequote all
slackalice said:
BigNige said:
My bad, should have explained myself better.

Accelerate, put pressure on the gear stick ready for the next gear, dip clutch and change - change is deffo quicker than the normal way of driving.


Right got ya, then the answer is yes, The selectors will wear out very quickly, they are normally made from a phos/bronze and are meant to be in the neutral position in the box held there by detent's on the rail until they are needed. It is for that reason you should never drive with one hand on the gear stick.



Thanks, 'twas all I needed to know.

BigNige

Original Poster:

2,584 posts

246 months

Monday 18th June 2007
quotequote all
bennno said:
BigNige said:
My bad, should have explained myself better.

Accelerate, put pressure on the gear stick ready for the next gear, dip clutch and change - change is deffo quicker than the normal way of driving.


Good call, and to totally stuff your gearbox keep your foot firmly on the accelerator whilst doing so to gain an additional nanosecond.

Bennno


A little understanding and discernment of genuine questions would bode you well my friend.

crisisjez

9,209 posts

227 months

Monday 18th June 2007
quotequote all
Sometimes its better to phone a friend than ask the audience

Boyce

204 posts

233 months

Thursday 21st June 2007
quotequote all
bennno said:
BigNige said:
My bad, should have explained myself better.

Accelerate, put pressure on the gear stick ready for the next gear, dip clutch and change - change is deffo quicker than the normal way of driving.


Good call, and to totally stuff your gearbox keep your foot firmly on the accelerator whilst doing so to gain an additional nanosecond.

Bennno


Got chatting to some guy's who drag race Mustang Cobra's, running around 550bhp FI, and they tell me they keep the throttled buried through out each gear change with good 1/4mile time improvements.

Not sure I'm brave enough myself, anyone tried it ?

stevieturbo

17,940 posts

269 months

Thursday 21st June 2007
quotequote all
Boyce said:
bennno said:
BigNige said:
My bad, should have explained myself better.

Accelerate, put pressure on the gear stick ready for the next gear, dip clutch and change - change is deffo quicker than the normal way of driving.
Good call, and to totally stuff your gearbox keep your foot firmly on the accelerator whilst doing so to gain an additional nanosecond.

Bennno
Got chatting to some guy's who drag race Mustang Cobra's, running around 550bhp FI, and they tell me they keep the throttled buried through out each gear change with good 1/4mile time improvements.

Not sure I'm brave enough myself, anyone tried it ?
If you really dont care about your car, try it.

But do think about what you are potentially damaging, every time you do wink

Demolition Man

1,050 posts

275 months

Thursday 21st June 2007
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You can do it with Racelogic so I'm told

delmeekc

1,205 posts

232 months

Thursday 21st June 2007
quotequote all
It can be done on a bike due to the gear setup in the box (dogs) but as far as I know as standard car gearbox is a different setup. I have never used the clutch on bike once in second going up the box but still not with it pinned unless you have a quickshifter fitted to the gear lever that cuts the ignition whilst you do it.

stigmundfreud

22,454 posts

232 months

Thursday 21st June 2007
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I keep my foot to the floor on all the upchanges in my (smart) car driving

delmeekc

1,205 posts

232 months

Friday 22nd June 2007
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that's virtually a bike, isn't it? needs a busa lump in it!

magicgreg

280 posts

225 months

Friday 22nd June 2007
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Full throtle changes are a risk that I have never attempted in any car.

Unless you are looking for every little bit of a 1/4 mile drag it seems pointless and possibly a costly method of changing gear at speed.

stevieturbo

17,940 posts

269 months

Friday 22nd June 2007
quotequote all
Demolition Man said:
You can do it with Racelogic so I'm told smile
Thats not quite the same thing I imagine.

If you can engage an auxiliary rev limit, so while your foot is on the clutch, rpm's are kept within sensible limits, that does remove one nasty aspect of flat shifting.