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Back to the question of blipping for multi gear downshifts...
There is a definite advantage to downshifting directly from your higher gear to the lower gear needed in a corner. - Less shifts means a lesser chance (as a mere human) of mucking up a change. - With the rapid speed that a racecar decelerates and how close ratio some gear boxes are, it can be hard to stir the box through all the gears in the time allowed. - The lower you go in the engine's RPM range the less engine torque there is to possibly upset the braking balance. (Once again as we are mere humans...) I remember an "American Sports Cavalcade" in the 80s where they showed a clip multiple times where Wayne Taylor was doing a 4th to 1st downshift. The English commentator (can't remember his name) was trying to explain for the general audience why it was desirable and how amazing it was that Taylor did it so effortlessly. This brings up the simple reason why you wouldn't want to try to speed match a multi gear downshift. - It is a LOT harder to gauge the correct speed to match because we aren't driving gods like Wayne Taylor! It is relatively simple to hear the correct change in engine speed needed to perform a correct shift regardless of speed because of the nature of the pitch of the sound. In a given car every change of gears between two gears will always have the same change of engine note no matter what speed you are going. The ratio of speed between gears is fixed. It is called the gear ratio and that should be pretty obvious. Sound is exactly the same. For example an "octave" is simply a doubling (or halving) of the frequency of sound. No matter speed when you change the frequency by a given percentage you will always get the same change in pitch. So to bring this back to your shifting... Your ear has been listening to your shifts for years and if you pay any attention you should know what change in pitch each shift should result in. Blipping to speed match is simply making that change happen with the accelerator. When you start doing multiple gears you don't have years of experience listening to that so you have lost a lot of your "autopilot" to help you. It will still be a consistent change in pitch so it is certainly learnable. I just don't know anyone personally that can do it. |
It's only seat time...and all of this should occur on a track. That having been said...
Only data and a stopwatch can determine which exit stategerie is best (i.e. 1st v. 2d). If you feel you absolutely need 1st, then all the same rules still apply at this level. Get your braking and downshifting done BEFORE corner entry. If this is an issue on track, then five straight (no corner) practices a day in an empty parking lot for a month will be a huge help. Accelerate into speed in second and work on braking hard while downshifting into first...all the while working on smoothness and car attitude. The pros have a raft of tricks with these cars including left foot braking (while keeping the throttle spooled up), anticipation of the boost and an understanding of what the car will do BEFORE it does it...they act WITH the car rather than REACT to it. Cheers. |
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"You are flying into a corner, trying to double clutch AND blip the throttle (double clutching usually requires TWO blips. If you're flying into the corner, you shouldn't be TRYING to double clutch - given your terms), ..." Double clutching doesn't require two blips of the throttle unless you are doing it wrong. You declutch to leave one gear then re-engage when you are in neutral. Then you 'blip' to match speeds with the next gear. Once you are matched you declutch to select the gear and then re-engage to complete the shift. Anything more is wasted motion which isn't necessary and you don't have time for it. Quote:
As far as the distance between gears... :) That is the exact reason why double clutching (or at least simple blipping) would be beneficial. The freer revving of a lighter flywheel will make it seem like there is less distance between gears but it adds other considerations... http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1454087625.jpg |
Double clutching doesn't require two blips of the throttle unless you are doing it wrong. You declutch to leave one gear then re-engage when you are in neutral. Then you 'blip' to match speeds with the next gear. Once you are matched you declutch to select the gear and then re-engage to complete the shift. Anything more is wasted motion which isn't necessary and you don't have time for it.
The second blip is necessary almost always and absolutely necessary with a lighter flywheel/clutch assy. After the lower gear is selected the rpm needed to accomplish the first part of the task have fallen and the throttle must be blipped again to match road speed (i.e., normal rev matching). At speed, this is critical. Watch any of several videos of pros racing vintage 911, most often with a 901, (where they are double clutching) and tell me I'm wrong. When I get the chance, I'll post one of mine also. |
HERE, at 1:30, one can see the double blip. The 5.5" Tilton clutch requires a tiny amount of travel at the pedal, so you won't see my left leg move, but here I move directly from 4th to 2d gear while double clutching as my syncros were worn(while hitting the gate at 3d, as is my practice).
Without the double blip down there, I'd be sideways. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Crud43y7qcI |
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Your two statements are kind of contradictory. Is it "row through all the gears" or jump shift because "many guys who read here daily do it and do it well..."? Your editing leaves out the part where they are opposing techniques. (I'd be surprised you can find someone here who on a regular basis performs double clutch, multi gear (jump shift) downshifts.) Both of my statements stand up. First one is simple. You shift once and you have one chance to make a mistake. You shift twice and you have twice the opportunity to screw up. That isn't the same as twice the probability. That is where my whole second explanation of why it is hard to accurately speed match multi gear changes. Because it is hard the probability of mucking up is higher so that is why mere mortals need not apply (including pro drivers). Ask the engine/transmission builder/pro level driver and I think you will find he will agree with my statements. In short: If you have the ability to perfectly match speeds when double clutching there is no wear during a shift so jump shifting during a downshift does nothing except reduce the needed actions of the driver. We aren't Wayne Taylor so I suspect we ALL stir all the gears during our daily drives. But I like to constantly learn so from time to time I practice "more advanced techniques" to challenge myself. (Hell I practice left foot braking but my left foot will never be sensitive like my right foot. I needed to start that in my twenties to turn it into a true reflex. But I still practice it...) |
Jeff Gamroth will tell you that he advises (and practices) selecting and engaging ALL gears through the process of braking into a corner. He insists that the opportunity to upset the car is greater if one skips.
Others will indeed skip. (I do at times) Pat Long and Leh Keen work all the gears all the way down. I will maintain that an accomplished driver never thinks once about his "rev matching" as this action is as natural as breathing and it matters not whether he is downshifting once for a corner, or four times. I hold several track records in several classes, but what do I know. I'm old and slow. But I can use my left foot.... |
Double blips are not required or desirable when double clutch downshifting.
When racing, I typically downshift through the gears but not all the time. Turn 11 at Sears Point is an example where I go from 4th down to 1st. Turn 2 at Sears Point is an example where I skip shift. I go from 4th straight to 2nd. |
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Think about this statement you made: "Double clutch is a way to shift a transmission that lacks syncros" How could that be true for double clutching AND not affect synchro life on transmissions with synchros? This is a nice vid: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z9HVkGSa694 |
[QUOTE=winders;8977126]Double blips are not required or desirable when double clutch downshifting.
QUOTE] So you're telling me that with your tiny clutch/flywheel that the revs stay up long enough that you (if you're double clutching) can blip in neutral, get the clutch in, engage the lower gear and then release the clutch without needing to blip again (if even a little bit) to match revs to road speed. Not in my car and I have the same setup. I'll find that video of one of the factory boys driving a vintage car. Double blip each time... I'll go get Kibort if you don't play nicely. |
On my daily driver 325i I've been heel and toeing and double clutching since I got the car, the pedals are nicely set up for it. I must be doing something right because at 200,000 miles the clutch is original and the trans still shifts smoothly.
When it's done quickly and correctly, particularly on a track or mountain road it is quite rewarding and ads to the driving experience of a sports car. It is something that manufacturers who are ditching manuals for PDKs, have forgotten about and think they know better when it comes knowing what we want. |
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So try 2nd gear , forget the 1st downshift (save on one upshift = saved time) and finish braking fractionally earlier and straight on the gas. You should juust be beginning to turn - or about to start. You have to judge when the whoomph is going to kick in. :-) Alan |
Very helpful...
I am usually late braking just short of the apex, and applying has at the apex.... But then you have to brake down to a pretty low speed prior to the corner, as you can't carry the braking into the turn... Will practice... Still seems first gear would be way faster on exit... |
Try both - 1st and 2nd. 2nd works for me (and leaves you less busy in a tight corner). Applying gas at the apex will leave you in the lag zone on exit - where you want the power. It is counter intuitive and you have to take a brave pill and un learn what you may do in a NA car. It is definitely a different technique, but I am sure you will get comfortable with it after a bit of practice , and getting the timing right and hitting exit on full boost is something only a turbo (930) driver can experience :-). Depending on the corner you moderate the rate you get the pedal to the floor - but you are definitely well ahead in that step than in a NA car.
Probably getting OT - but just answering your query. You can PM me if you want. Regards Alan |
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1st gear would be unusable in my case. No way to put that power down. and even with second, by the time I was straightening the wheel, I needed to go to third, so 1st would be a shift with way too much lateral G's. Trouble. For the 911, I just don't see stock 1st being useful on the track. Might be too much torque to keep the car stable, and with a slower shifter, you would be out of it so fast that gains might be lost with the extra shift. Just keep the momentum up in second. Mind you, my 911 has a shorter second (with extra power and less weight), and it eats our hairpin up right now. Vicious. |
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Alan |
gotta say the another reason for heel toe, rarely mentioned, is to clear and sharpen the motor on decel esp hotrod engines with carbs. such a great sound. and no automatic or paddle shifter car will ever be able to make that sound during hard braking into a corner. it's a preamble to the loaded wail of exiting the turn. ya know?
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