Fake manual transmission is basically like playing a simulator.

8 points

I’ve only ever driven a petrol manual and a petrol automatic. Both very similar cars other than the manual was a 1,200, and the automatic was a 1L. I wildly prefer driving the manual one, granted most of my driving is in the country where it’s fun to throw it about the gears a bit and there isn’t tedius clutch control in traffic. I just find it a lot more fun, especially when rev matching etc, it just feels more rewarding to drive.

However, if I was driving an electric car, I wouldn’t want it emulating a petrol manual, I’d want to try embrace it for what it is, and have fun with the faster acceleration instead of the gears. My main issues with current electric cars is they all seem to have massive bloody screens. To me this is the ideal interior for a car, its not to everyones taste but it provides actual physical gauges for everything I want, a screen small enough that it’s not distracting, but big enough that it’s useful for android auto, and I can’t believe I have to say this but actual buttons I can click without taking my eyes off the road, feeling that the button has been clicked.

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5 points
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Manuals will always be unmatched for driving pleasure, but electric and hybrid cars usually don’t have automatic transmissions, they have CVTs, which are better than automatics IMHO.

They don’t have gears to switch between, so you usually don’t feel any shifting, just regular progression. If you input maximum acceleration they may reach the redline without changing the ratio and then drop down suddenly, in that case you feel sort of a shift, but that’s rare if you drive normally.

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5 points

Most EVs don’t even have CVTs. They often don’t even have multi-speed transmissions at all. The type of electric motor used produces maximum torque at 0 RPM, so it no longer needs a transmission to prevent stalling and its torque-RPM curve is so flat that a multi-speed transmission would reduce performance under most driving conditions.

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6 points
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Deleted by creator
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4 points

Creep is a useful feature to turn on/off though, even if it’s mimicking something.

But yeah, I think it’s going to be an exciting time for a while as ideas and features are thrown around. Old conventions will die as new ones are born.

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3 points

I think most cars will keep doing this since most people are so used to that behavior.

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5 points

I always figured I’d have to give up my manual for an electric car at some point, even if it’s fake I’d still prefer that to just driving an automatic. I don’t really care about engine noise though

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2 points

Electrics aren’t automatic, they have continuous transmissions, there are no distinct gears. It’s not bad, you get used to it.

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2 points
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A continuously variable transmission (CVT) is an automatic transmission

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Continuously_variable_transmission

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1 point
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EVs don’t have CVTs. They don’t have a transmission at all. Even the reverse is just the engine spinning opposite. The engine is connected directly to the drive shaft.

I think the previous poster means that from a driver perspective they operate the same as a CVT. But it’s not. It’s just a battery, an engine, a drive shaft and wheels.

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4 points

I get really annoyed by car journalists obsession with manuals. I’ve driven and owned manual cars in my life, and they are cool, but also inconvenient, annoying to drive in traffic, and now objectively slower and less efficient than a modern automatic.

Fun on a backroad is not a huge factor in buying a car for the vast majority of people. And even a person like me, that enjoys a spirited drive, I don’t want to deal with a manual the other 85% of the time.

I just want them to recognize that and stop putting manuals on a pedestal.

This kind thing, is pretty dumb as well.

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3 points

but i love my manual transmission car!
I think it’s super weird that they would merge the two technologies, but I know plenty of Germans that feel way too uncomfortable driving a manual, so i could see this being a nice medium for at least a minute

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3 points

I grew up on a stickshift, and in the winters here, there’s nothing better for not getting stuck or making it up that annoying hill I live on.

But, the reasons for that is because you can slip the clutch and vastly reduce the torque so you’re not loosing traction on slippery hills or on plows. Spinning your wheels just gets you dug in more, so you want low, consistent torque when you don’t have traction.

with an EV, you kind of have that built in. (and could even have driving profiles that accommodate this even more so.)
…Still the shifter knob is a place to rest my hand…

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1 point

I could just see some obnoxious guy pipe the sound of the fake engine into his ultraloud sound system to flood the neighborhood with the sound of his acceleration.

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