|
|
|
|
|
by jrabone
4870 days ago
|
|
It's standard dogma, including in the advanced driving courses (eg. police). "Gears for go, brakes for slow" Why this is so, I'm not entirely sure; it does mean that you can change from manual to auto transmission without thinking (and potentially without making a fatal mistake at speed if you are pursuing a suspect). However, it just shifts the cognitive effort of making sure you're always in the correct gear (which I think is also standard advice in eg. the roadcraft system). From a professional owner / driver perspective (eg. a taxi), the answer is simple; brakes are cheap to replace, clutches aren't. What they really don't tell you about are things like left foot braking (which I don't do) and heel-and-toe (which I do, especially when leaving motorways where we tend to have a junction followed by an uphill slip road). |
|
Yeah, I was used to driving my Subaru Impreza with a stick shift, then I drove my dads BMW 5-series, got into a sticky situation in traffic and had to come to a quick and sudden stop, there was no thinking involved, push the clutch and the brake was my immediate reaction... let me tell you, that BMW stopped on a dime, luckily there was no-one behind me or I'd have to explain to my dad how instinct and sheer muscle memory on my part caused someone to rear-end me and ruin his car, all because my left foot went for the clutch and caught the edge of the brake pedal...