I don't know if this is a bug because what I think is wrong with the gear whine seems to be intended by Scawen. However:
Why is the gear whine not directly aligned with the car speed?
As this video (you probably know) shows, it should be.
In LFS this is not the case. I always felt like it but now that I'm S2 licensed I'm pretty sure I found evidence: I took out the XFR. In "Shift+A" I turned gear whine volume to 2.0 and gear whine muffling to 0.5.
I exit the pit box in first gear reaching 78km/h (if you use mph you may not know this is the max. speed which you can drive with the pit speed limiter on).
Now if I shift gears up to 6th without leaving my right foot from the gas pedal and thus without changing the cars speed still though the pitch of the gear whine sound moves down.
I think (code-wise) it's easier to link the pitch directly to car speed than to do it the way it is. Thus it must be intentional. I just don't know why.
(My personal version of a) Technical explaination (that could be wrong):
In most cases a racing gear box will make a whining noise because the gear wheels are cut straight in contrast to helical cut gears in road cars gearboxes.
As you'll notice all (forward) gear wheels are in permanent mesh. That way it is not possible for the whining sound to change in pitch when gears are shifted.
Why is the gear whine not directly aligned with the car speed?
As this video (you probably know) shows, it should be.
In LFS this is not the case. I always felt like it but now that I'm S2 licensed I'm pretty sure I found evidence: I took out the XFR. In "Shift+A" I turned gear whine volume to 2.0 and gear whine muffling to 0.5.
I exit the pit box in first gear reaching 78km/h (if you use mph you may not know this is the max. speed which you can drive with the pit speed limiter on).
Now if I shift gears up to 6th without leaving my right foot from the gas pedal and thus without changing the cars speed still though the pitch of the gear whine sound moves down.
I think (code-wise) it's easier to link the pitch directly to car speed than to do it the way it is. Thus it must be intentional. I just don't know why.
(My personal version of a) Technical explaination (that could be wrong):
In most cases a racing gear box will make a whining noise because the gear wheels are cut straight in contrast to helical cut gears in road cars gearboxes.
As you'll notice all (forward) gear wheels are in permanent mesh. That way it is not possible for the whining sound to change in pitch when gears are shifted.