Road and Track "apologizes to the world" over PDK
#1
Road and Track "apologizes to the world" over PDK
Yikes, looks like Road & Track are no longer PDK fans. I have been saying this all along.
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The crux of the issue is that there's a fundamental difference between speed-obsessed German engineers and good ol' silly Americans who just love to drive a manual. For the former, there's a point at which the automatic is faster and can be programmed to be more efficient. It then becomes "better." To the rest of us, it merely becomes a better automatic. And while the GT3's PDK is one of the better automatics, there is not, nor will there ever be, an automatic that is as involving as a manual. The 911, like so many other cars, has traded a degree of involvement for speed. We'd happily lose time on the sprint to 60 mph, or a few seconds per lap, if it meant more fun.
Tobias Hutzler But rather than lay all the blame on Preuninger and Germans as a whole, we're partly at fault. There was a time when most enthusiasts seemed to view the dual-clutch automatic as the second coming. After living with those transmissions for a decade, they just feel like automatics.
On that note, allow us to apologize on behalf of an entire industry. We were wrong. We don't care about shaving tenths off acceleration runs. We want to work for our lap times. We're bored to death behind the wheel, and we want to get busy with a shift lever and a clutch pedal.
Perhaps those Germans also can admit they made a mistake.
#2
I'd suggest to the driver: If you're bored, you're not going fast enough.
I'd suggest to R&T: If you don't like it, don't buy it. Sales will either plummet, and a manufacturer will have to find other (perhaps older) ways to make money. Or sales will go up, and dinosaurs will become extinct (with fossilized remains becoming collector's editions).
I'd suggest to R&T: If you don't like it, don't buy it. Sales will either plummet, and a manufacturer will have to find other (perhaps older) ways to make money. Or sales will go up, and dinosaurs will become extinct (with fossilized remains becoming collector's editions).
#6
I'd suggest to the driver: If you're bored, you're not going fast enough.
I'd suggest to R&T: If you don't like it, don't buy it. Sales will either plummet, and a manufacturer will have to find other (perhaps older) ways to make money. Or sales will go up, and dinosaurs will become extinct (with fossilized remains becoming collector's editions).
I'd suggest to R&T: If you don't like it, don't buy it. Sales will either plummet, and a manufacturer will have to find other (perhaps older) ways to make money. Or sales will go up, and dinosaurs will become extinct (with fossilized remains becoming collector's editions).
ChuckJ
#7
ChuckJ
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#8
if you really want to have that connected feeling, buy a miata :-)
wonder how they feel about rev-matching technology? half the fun is trying to match the rpms, but a computer is doing that now....
wonder how they feel about rev-matching technology? half the fun is trying to match the rpms, but a computer is doing that now....
#10
I feel like I have a pretty good understanding of this whole manual/pdk dilemma....both from the manufacturers as well as the consumer....and personally I love both.....each have their place.
BUT....for Porsche in particular, taking into consideration manufacturing cost, is it too expensive for them to offer a PDK in the GT3 for an "extra" charge?.....hell, CCB's are almost 10k....I'd bet there are plenty of guys willing to pay an additional 15k + for a manual option.
What say you?
BUT....for Porsche in particular, taking into consideration manufacturing cost, is it too expensive for them to offer a PDK in the GT3 for an "extra" charge?.....hell, CCB's are almost 10k....I'd bet there are plenty of guys willing to pay an additional 15k + for a manual option.
What say you?
#11
No rev-matching allowed. Anyone can position a stick, just like anyone can move a lever or pull/push a button. Doing several things at once is the challenge. And yes, that's fun on the track; but so is winning.
ChuckJ
ChuckJ
#12
ChuckJ
#14
ChuckJ