Every time I drive Dani's car (a rare occurrence) I am reminded that
driving an automatic transmission requires specific skills that I
apparently haven't learned. I assume there's a trick to accelerating --
that you can regulate the gas flow (via the gas pedal) to kick the gears
in when you want them to -- but I'm afraid I will be forever reaching for
the clutch pedal and shifter while driving. :-) This has happened with
multiple cars, so it's probably me and not the car.
(We're going to his company's winter party after work, I'd rather he drive home in the dark with the predicted sleet, and he's not cleared for my manual transmission. So since he takes the bus to work anyway, I just took his car today.)
(no subject)
Date: 2008-12-16 05:03 pm (UTC)Yep - N and I are forever having this conversation, being a split household ourselves. When he stomps on the gas pedal in my truck, she just makes a lot of noise and doesn't really go anywhere... there's a trick to getting her to drop a gear and MOVE into traffic, which is what he's trying to do. You kinda lay off the gas for a second and then push the pedal. It's hard to explain (and varies by vehicle - mine is really finicky about it).
because it all comes down to vi vs. emacs
Date: 2008-12-16 05:04 pm (UTC)The right thing to do with a manual is exactly the wrong thing to do with an automatic. When you feel the upshift starting, you need to increase pressure on the gas pedal rather than backing off. Same thing when you slow down. Don't bump the gas on the downshift.
We push those details off to the automatic portion of our brains. Really, when was the last time you consciously thought "I need to shift from second gear to third gear now, so I'll press the clutch in while easing off on the gas, push the shifter over and up, and then slowly release the clutch while pushing down on the gas"?
I suspect the problem is that the rest of the driving experience is so similar that it confuses our reflexes. Think of text editors. I (and probably most people) can freely jump from emacs to vi to word. An emacs-like or vi-like editor, though, will confuse the hell out of me because it's just similar enough to make finger memory kick in.
Re: because it all comes down to vi vs. emacs
From:Re: because it all comes down to vi vs. emacs
From:(no subject)
Date: 2008-12-16 05:40 pm (UTC)Regardless, yes-- you can influence when an automatic transmission shifts by how much gas you feed it, and each one is slightly different.
(no subject)
Date: 2008-12-16 07:17 pm (UTC)(no subject)
From:There's a trick
Date: 2008-12-16 11:28 pm (UTC)Re: There's a trick
From:(no subject)
Date: 2008-12-19 03:19 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2008-12-21 01:13 am (UTC)It could be a different sort of subconscious assimilation of data. When driving I try to predict what other cars are going to do so am constantly thinking about optimization, whereas when typing I just think "paste!" and my fingers do something (which is no longer always correct).