Down shifting
Does anybody 'blip' the throttle on a down shift ?
I know is meant to give a smoother change, but one thing that i am curious about is does it give your clutch an easier life.
Any thoughts......
I know is meant to give a smoother change, but one thing that i am curious about is does it give your clutch an easier life.
Any thoughts......
Originally Posted by nik52wrx
Does anybody 'blip' the throttle on a down shift ?
I know is meant to give a smoother change, but one thing that i am curious about is does it give your clutch an easier life.
Any thoughts......
I know is meant to give a smoother change, but one thing that i am curious about is does it give your clutch an easier life.
Any thoughts......
Yes when double declutching.
Then sometimes just when changing down without double declutching.
Then I sometimes heel and toe as well.
Depends on the situation.
Clutch life? Not sure.
Matching engine revs to road speed on downchanges could, presumably, ease the load on the syncros.
Then sometimes just when changing down without double declutching.
Then I sometimes heel and toe as well.
Depends on the situation.
Clutch life? Not sure.
Matching engine revs to road speed on downchanges could, presumably, ease the load on the syncros.
99% of the time I blip, results in a smoother Journey for everyone and everything concerned at the very least.
I also heel and toe where possible. Keeps the car stable under braking, and again it's a smooth ride.
I've been doing it for a few years now and it's second nature to me now really.
I also heel and toe where possible. Keeps the car stable under braking, and again it's a smooth ride.
I've been doing it for a few years now and it's second nature to me now really.
Always blip on every downchange, heel & toe where necessary. If you drive in the police class one pursuit style then heel & toe becomes less used as the brake usage is almost negated on all but very tight twisty roads.
Originally Posted by corradoboy
Always blip on every downchange, heel & toe where necessary. If you drive in the police class one pursuit style then heel & toe becomes less used as the brake usage is almost negated on all but very tight twisty roads.
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Pretty much all the time. Blipping going down, and matching revs going up.
Double-declutch when cold too. Box seems much more happy - no reluctance in any gearshifts.
Learnt all the above because I once regulary drove early Porsche 911s. Driving them any otherway was pure ignorant abuse on behalf of the driver.
Oh and not to mention the early MTX75 equipped XR3 that spat out syncros on a regular basis
Right...who's going to start a thread asking who can do seamless clutchless gearchanges????
Double-declutch when cold too. Box seems much more happy - no reluctance in any gearshifts.
Learnt all the above because I once regulary drove early Porsche 911s. Driving them any otherway was pure ignorant abuse on behalf of the driver.

Oh and not to mention the early MTX75 equipped XR3 that spat out syncros on a regular basis

Right...who's going to start a thread asking who can do seamless clutchless gearchanges????

Last edited by ALi-B; Oct 17, 2005 at 04:04 PM.
Blipping the throttle - when down shifting just hit the throttle to get the appropriate correct revs. Heel and toe is doing the same thing, but whilst braking. Using the outside of the foot to "blip" the throttle whilst you brake and downshift.
Take care when learning to heel and toe. On a quiet road to start or preferably track.
Oh and if you want to double declutch on way up, no blipping just "engage" neutral as you change gear. I've sometimes used it on cars with "baulky" changes.
My old GTE 16v comes to mind.
Oh and if you want to double declutch on way up, no blipping just "engage" neutral as you change gear. I've sometimes used it on cars with "baulky" changes.
My old GTE 16v comes to mind.
"The purpose of the double clutch is to match the speed of the rotating parts of the gearbox for the gear you wish to select to the speed of the input shaft being driven by the engine. Once the speeds are matched, the gear will engage smoothly. If the speeds are not matched, the gears will "crash" or grate as they come into mesh. A modern synchromesh gearbox accomplishes this automatically, negating the need."
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Originally Posted by Vegescoob
Take care when learning to heel and toe. On a quiet road to start or preferably track.
Oh and if you want to double declutch on way up, no blipping just "engage" neutral as you change gear. I've sometimes used it on cars with "baulky" changes.
My old GTE 16v comes to mind.
Oh and if you want to double declutch on way up, no blipping just "engage" neutral as you change gear. I've sometimes used it on cars with "baulky" changes.
My old GTE 16v comes to mind.
NS04
Originally Posted by Tripple'O G
On the back of this.......
Had my scoob for about 6 weeks (been in the garage for 3)
Do you find since bying a faster car you end up braking even more??
Had my scoob for about 6 weeks (been in the garage for 3)
Do you find since bying a faster car you end up braking even more??
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From: Ibiza TDI - Causing a smokescreen on a back road near you
Originally Posted by Tripple'O G
On the back of this.......
Had my scoob for about 6 weeks (been in the garage for 3)
Do you find since bying a faster car you end up braking even more??
Had my scoob for about 6 weeks (been in the garage for 3)
Do you find since bying a faster car you end up braking even more??
No class one pursuit training for me, just roadcraft course
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