levels of fatigue are remarkably reduced.(its amazin). mileage however maybe a minor downside. but guys who think of automatics dont think about mileage

Aha! vina saar trying to pull a fast RM herevina wrote:Guys face it. Autos is for Americans and Wimmins who really cant drive /dont enjoy driving. These are basically back seaters who somehow are being forced to drive.
Yup. It is like swimming, cycling and fu**ing I guess. Once you learn it, you never lose it, even if you haven't used it in quite a while.But the left hand instinctively dropped down and shifted to second. Then I realized that I will be fine
Pah!.. I lived in Massa too and I lived in NYC and SF, probably the two absolutely toughest places to be driving a stick in the US. NY for the traffic and SF for it's steep hills. Other than these two places, nearly everyother place in US is stick friendly. Hardly much traffic, huge separation between cars, why you hardly shift at all, once you get into the freeway. Compare that to the commute in Yindia .. Even Oierope you shift a lot more than in US.For everyday commute automatic is preferable esp. in massa - stick shift is just an extra chore
Why need to shift at all then (let the car do it for you when required once in a blue moon), hain?vina wrote: Other than these two places, nearly everyother place in US is stick friendly. Hardly much traffic, huge separation between cars, why you hardly shift at all, once you get into the freeway.
Here you are talking. You give a slick shifting 5 speed civic in the hands of a good driver and the same auto version of the car, the difference is humongous. The car runs better,accelerates better, is smoother overall and more efficient, not to mention better control . that is what REAL men want !.Even with 5-7 year old technology I don't think the gas savings of an avg. driver in a stick shift vs. auto shift are that different - I have done impromptu medium length tests of avg. gas mileage b/w my non-CVT auto Civic and other stick shift Civics several times during univ.....the diff. was somewhere between 1 - 2 mpg
OK this is where the problem lies. Yes 3-speed auto is total Pakistan - no question about it. However most Japanese 4 speed and now any good CVT is pretty darn good - in fact for most drivers they will do much better mileage wise in the CVT. Unless you are a rally driver it is unlikely you will be able to average out better than a properly programmed CVT today - this is something even the auto manufacturers agree on privately (stick shift is there for nostalgia purposes and for those who really need it - there are some places an automatic wont dare tread but most drivers dont drive in those places).vina wrote: Atleast CVT and the newer fangled 6 and 7 speed autos in the German cars is close to getting there. The crappy 3 speed autos in AmirKhani cars (the Japanese cars like Civic etc had 4 speed right?) or the atrocious autobox you get in India (3 speed again in the Marutis and Hyundais) are just garbage. Wasteful, terrible performance and jerky. A real shame in fact.
There is very little or no difference in the pickup for the current automatics in street conditions (mileage difference is becoming insignificant) and the CVTs now actually shift way more smoothly than stick (here I am talking about in the hands of test drivers who drive more miles a year than most people do in their lifetimes). Actually unlike what most REAL men think - an average driver is not a great drivervina wrote: Here you are talking. You give a slick shifting 5 speed civic in the hands of a good driver and the same auto version of the car, the difference is humongous. The car runs better,accelerates better, is smoother overall and more efficient, not to mention better control . that is what REAL men want !.
No question about the fun partSriman wrote:But a nice car with smooth shifting manual gearbox is a lot of fun.
I have driven some Beemers and Mercs with this thingamajig - it works really really really good for a recent Merc I tested (radar based, release probably in 2H12 or 2H13) but on the currently available models personally I felt better leaving it off - it might just be a personal choice.Drevin wrote:has anyone driven a car with "adaptive cruise control". Does it reduce bodyache, fatigue on long jouney's.
The only guys who ever put CVTs on cars in AmirKhan markets is 1) Honda in the CIVIC HX range, 2) Subaru - discontinued long ago, mid 90s I think and 3) Audi - steel belted CVTs.any good CVT is pretty darn good - in fact for most drivers they will do much better mileage wise in the CVT. Unless you are a rally driver it is unlikely you will be able to average out better than a properly programmed CVT today
Drevin wrote:has anyone driven a car with "adaptive cruise control". Does it reduce bodyache, fatigue on long jouney's.
Nah...best way to reduce fatigue on long journeys is to travel in AC sleeper class on Indian Railways - unless you are flying business/1st class nothing comes close to that!vera_k wrote:Drevin wrote:has anyone driven a car with "adaptive cruise control". Does it reduce bodyache, fatigue on long jouney's.Only way to reduce fatigue on long journeys is to fly.
DAF Variomatic works like this in videoContinuously Variable Transmissions (CVT) arent all that new. Remember the little DAF 66 Variomatic from the seventies? That used what was ostensibly an oversized rubber band running between two pulleys with sloping surfaces. One of the pulleys connected to the engine output, the other to the drive shafts. Each pulley was made of two pieces and when pushed together the sloped surfaces would cause the pulleys diameter to grow.
This changed the effective gearing and meant that the little DAF could do away with a conventional gearbox. It had, in effect, an infinite number of gears. So far, so complicated. The problem with these gearboxes was the so-called rubber band effect.
When you pressed the throttle pedal, the engine automatically revved to its maximum power output, the engine noise rising instantly with the cars actual acceleration slowly catching up. This gave a nasty slipping clutch effect which proved very unpopular with most drivers who preferred to equate their road speed with the noise their engine was making.
"You can knock the selector to the right and nudge the car between any of the six-ratios in true touring car style."
Another significant problem with this system was that in cars with any useful torque, the elastic band would blow its brains out so for years CVTs were only available on shopping trolleys like the Fiat Uno Selecta or the Subaru Justy. It was only with the advent of steel belts instead of rubber ones that CVT gearboxes could make the big leap forward. Audis Multitronic gearbox mated a CVT to big power and MG Rovers Steptronic was similarly effective. Stump up a premium of £1,050 over the sticker price of a manual MINI One or Cooper and you can get a version of the Steptronic box fitted.
This gearbox gets around the dreaded elastic band effect by having six artificially mandated gears rather than one continuous ratio. The gearstick that sprouts from the floor can be left in an automatic mode, where it replicates the actions of a normal torque converter-equipped automatic gearbox quite well, or you can knock the selector to the right and nudge the car between any of the six-ratios in true touring car style sequential and forward for downchanges, backward for upshifts. Its still amazing how many manufacturers get this system round the wrong way! Steptronic steering wheel paddles represent an affordable option at £50. Two different driving modes are offered, normal and sport.
When in sport mode, the engine hangs on to each gear a little longer, but the electronics dont do anything particularly fancy to the stability control system or the damping. Fuel economy for both cars is quoted a 7.7 litres per 100km travelled which in old money translates as an average of 37 miles per gallon. Carbon dioxide emissions are quoted as 187 grammes per kilometre.
The MINI One with the CVT gearbox will accelerate to 60mph in 12.5 seconds and on to a top speed of 106mph while the 115bhp Cooper will cover the sprint in 10.2 seconds and hit a terminal velocity of 115mph. The CVT gearchange in many ways typifies the MINI an old idea brought resolutely up to date.
According to me the two are mutually exclusive. Each has its own charms.Raja Bose wrote:Nah...best way to reduce fatigue on long journeys is to travel in AC sleeper class on Indian Railways - unless you are flying business/1st class nothing comes close to that!vera_k wrote:Only way to reduce fatigue on long journeys is to fly.
I completely agree with this style of thinking. Feeling the surge of ur car in connection with tactile feedback from ur hand and foot is more youthful.Raja Bose wrote:vina saar,
Nowadays, all this automatics are for wimps onlee and REAL men drive manual onlee is similar to the debate about the space shuttle where even though the space shuttle was designed to and is perfectly capable of landing automatically, the astronauts demanded that they be allowed to do some things manually, just so that they had something to do! So now they are allowed to press buttons to choose landing sites and lower the landing gear so that they can feel "manly/herrowic"
The technology is already present. It comes in two variants - GHQ and SHQHari Seldon wrote:Rumor has it that the Tatas are planning to intro the latest under-wraps JLR technology.... remote controlled gear+clutch+brakes.... gives a whole new (literal) meaning to backseat driving ... just hope the remote batteries are well charged.....
Sportronic/tiptronics are a decent compromise but most of them are sequential (you cannot shift directly from say 5 to 2) which kinda defeats the purpose. A friend of mine went from stick shift Audi to a tiptronic Audi and regrets it. I drove an Altima with tiptronic and it was pretty decent.Drevin wrote: I havent tried these new txmissions called sportronic etc which are essentially automatics but have a manual mode. It worx just like a stick but there is no clutch.
Would this be the best of both worlds.![]()
How old is your friend ? . Remember, despite all that marketing and "positioning" rubbish aimed at "youth" and all that.Audi to a tiptronic Audi and regrets it
If you want a German car, do yourself a favor, get yourself the real thing ( Mercedes, BMW or Porsche), if not for God's sake at least get a VW!. Audi is for pretenders.Audis are generally meant for retired Jurman Babus! Audi Vahan is the old babu geezer vahan of choice