Policy Limits
Enthusiast
- Joined
- Nov 15, 2012
- Posts
- 1,372
- Reaction score
- 1
Read the Owner's Manual on line a couple of times and while they talk about properly breaking in the car, there's no info on how to properly downshift. Upshifting is pretty obvious and there's really only one way to do it. But with downshifting there's a debate with manual transmissions as to whether the operator should select each lower gear on the way down (IE go from 5th to 4th to 3rd to 2nd) or whether he should just place the car in neutral and come to a stop, or whether he should keep the car in high gear and then place in neutral at the stop. I realize that different drivers will do all different styles. But what is the majority of snake drivers doing?
I havent had a manual in years and the closest thing recently I've had is an e-gear transmission and I personally chose to rev match RPM's with each gear in downshifting all the way down. I've heard arguments for preserving brake wear v. clutch wear and arguments of being in gear and therefore in control v. beig in neutral and not so much. Also, obviously the car redlines mid 6000RPM but what is reasonably shift interval on the way up for street crusing(not track time?) 3500? 4000?
Would love to hear what the couple hundred owners of gen V have been doing this past week of ownership or from previous gen owners or better yet from SRT engineers themselves. Sorry if this question has already been presented.
I havent had a manual in years and the closest thing recently I've had is an e-gear transmission and I personally chose to rev match RPM's with each gear in downshifting all the way down. I've heard arguments for preserving brake wear v. clutch wear and arguments of being in gear and therefore in control v. beig in neutral and not so much. Also, obviously the car redlines mid 6000RPM but what is reasonably shift interval on the way up for street crusing(not track time?) 3500? 4000?
Would love to hear what the couple hundred owners of gen V have been doing this past week of ownership or from previous gen owners or better yet from SRT engineers themselves. Sorry if this question has already been presented.