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#57 |
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Senior Member
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Drives: 2014 BRZ Limited
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#58 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: May 2014
Drives: Toyota GT86 Coupe Red (UK)
Location: United Kingdom
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Quote:
The UK is hilly, lots of junctions on hills. A lot of things people "learning manual" worry about is stuff we do every day. All parking here is parallel parking or reverse bay parking, usually on a hill, even some car parks are on a hill. Our cars are tiny compared to yours, but so are are parking spaces! Lots of slipping the clutch while slow maneuvering, lots of sitting on hills at junctions on the clutch. All of these things wears clutch friction plates faster and deadens the springs. Release bearings, not so much. 2. It's not what I say, it's what I have been told and never heard a problem with it until I read forums like this. The problem you describe, blowing a throw out bearing appears to be something that rarely happens. The same applies both ways I'm not going to believe you who says hovering on the clutch pedal causes release bearing failure and I should dance my feet around on the floor, pedal, on the floor, pedal, it's daft. It's actually hard to find any video of anyone outside of the US doing the pedal dance, TBH. Most people in the UK and I mean most people, not petrol heads, couldn't tell you a thing about what a clutch does or what they do with it, but they will scare you sometimes with the things they will do with the clutch in precision and finesse. Every 16 year old knows how to use a clutch. Even what would otherwise be blonde bimbos can be amazingly good with a clutch, but wouldn't have the faintest idea what a release bearing was and she would probably never need it replaced. I'd estimate that 99% of us sit with our foot on the clutch 90% of the time. I don't see any massive rushes on clutch release bearings, nor head about them. |
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#59 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: May 2014
Drives: Toyota GT86 Coupe Red (UK)
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Then again... this happened a few blocks from where I work.
[ame="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tf4TIWECZ30"]World's Worst Attempt At Parallel Parking, Enjoy! - YouTube[/ame] |
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#60 |
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Thanks
Join Date: Apr 2013
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lmao I watched 3 minutes and I had to stop
__________________
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#61 |
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Senior Member
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But it only gets better!
Especially the roaring, standing ovation she gets at the end.
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#62 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: May 2014
Drives: Toyota GT86 Coupe Red (UK)
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They sell T-Shirts here for it. Seriously. It's a local University teacher/lecturer.
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#63 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2014
Drives: 2014 FR-S
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Quote:
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#64 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: May 2014
Drives: Toyota GT86 Coupe Red (UK)
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Very few cars make it to 150,000 miles here. Very very few. See my point about "no mile is the same as another".
It's not that we are hard on cars, it's just that journies are typically short, urban or inter-urban jonts. Compared to a lot of America our journeys and the time we spend on highways is quite short. The bit of the world I live in, shore to shore has about 100 miles of motorway. |
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#65 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2014
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Quote:
I'm in southern California, 2 times a day the roads are turned into parking lots, we redefine stop and go traffic. Like I said, they put a dead pedal there for a reason, and that is to keep people from resting their foot on the clutch. The engineers that design this stuff know a thing or two. |
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#66 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2014
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#67 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: May 2014
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Lets face it, America + Motorsport.... not even on the calendar. Indicar, Nascar, LMAO! Interesting attempt, very quaint. America plus driving, not really an internationally recognized thing. Try Italy or England or Austria, FINLAND are GODS. Internationally we see American roads as long, straight, boring highways coupled with cities laid out on a grid. <Shakes head> tame, boring. Europe a different story. Heritage, pedigree, the origin of almost all sports cars including a lot of American ones and most Japanese ones.
Internationally if you asked someone, who to ask for advice on driving, no-one would offer the USA. Guaranteed. Of course as, to you, the world exists of, "The great USA and everyone else, mostly backward nations and people who don't respect the U S of A who we bomb until they submit" then of course the world revolves around US driving. Which from an international stand point is pretty "out of the league" poor, to be honest. You very seldom do well in any international motor racing. Most of your cars are soft armchair barges with V8s that produce less than most Japanese 4 pots and polute more than twice what the jap care does. The fact some of you can drive a manual is surprising. The chances of any of your doing it properly, leaves a lot of doubt. Last edited by paulca; 06-29-2014 at 09:04 PM. Reason: FINLAND! |
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#68 | |
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Retired formula car racer
Join Date: Jun 2014
Drives: 2013 Scion FR-S Manual
Location: Niagara Falls, ON
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Quote:
If it is really taking you so long to get from the dead pedal to the clutch pedal that you have to rest your foot over top of it, perhaps you should consider the automatic FR-S. I hear it's nice. :P |
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#69 |
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Senior Member
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So you still had no formal manual training. That's what you are saying. Not on road driving a manual. In the UK your driving test requires you show how to drive a manual car safety and efficiently.
Race driving is NOT the same as how your supposed to drive safely on the road. Even if you did do proper manual training, hovering over the clutch does no harm or negligible harm. You are all so hyper about manual, you see it as something special, that only "good drivers" do, only sporty drivers know how to, only a petrol head thing, but over here, everyone drives a manual, nobody drives an auto. We see auto drivers as a bit special. |
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