Are the pedals on real cars always throttle, brakes, and clutch from right to left? I thought that on cars with right hand drive, the throttle and clutch pedals are switched.
i always figured that the gears would be mirrored.
so in US, first is upper left, in europe, with shifter on left, first should be upper right, but i guess they dont use different "euro spec" transmisssions with reversed gears, so yeah.
i guess the only "special" transmission quirks to watch out for in europe would be the dogleg shifter, where 1 is 2, 2 is 3 and 3 is straight below 2
I've never heard of this one, but I always wondered how does the transmission lever behind the steering wheel work? Is it a manual or automatic? How are the gears (or modes) positioned?
i know 2 people who either have owned (and want to buy again) or currently do own a car with a dogleg layout (and thats without counting all his 190e forum freinds some of which i met) and have driven one of their cars
Chances are I'll drive a car with a dogleg first later today...
And we have a Packard 8 that visits us from time to time which has the accelerator in the middle - but I haven't plucked up the courage to try it on the road yet. It's a big big, and a bit expensive, and a panic brake could result in an increase of speed. Gulp!
Many years ago as a technician I had a car (I think it was a Ford Sierra) to work on that was an auto but had the throttle and brake pedals swapped over (owner had some sort of disability).
Was too scared to road test the thing in case as Tristan mentioned with the Packard I instinctively went for the brakes and got the wrong result!
A lot of old American cars had a manual shifter mounted on the steering column. A common expression to describe this was "three-on-the-tree." The typical alternative was "four-on-the-floor."
A lot of European cars had, up until the early 60s (with probably some later exceptions) had column shifts as well. I've yet to come across one with more than 4 gears, plus reverse, but maybe 5-speeds existed too.
Some cars had auto column shift, some manual. I've driven an '85 Toyota hiace van that had a 5 speed manual column shift. It's only advantage i could see was i could reach the lever with 3 people in the front seats, with a floor shift, you'd be out of room.
A mate of mine had a merc cosworth 190e and it had that weird dogleg box in it, the amount of times he would forget when he first got it and be beaten off the lights by something crappy because he had tried to pull away in 2nd gear
In case anyone doesn't know what people mean when they say 'dogleg' gearbox, i have added a picture, but i cant remember where reverse was so i left that out.
Ah, thanks, I had no idea what you were on about Didn't Ferrari use to have those kind of gearboxes as well? I seem to recall the Testarossa has such a gearbox, but I may be mistaken.
And I think reverse was all the way top left, but further left than 1st gear.
Yeah, when I was stationed (and racing) in Japan, it was the exact same. The only difference was that I had to shift toward me, instead of away from me. I actually liked it better that way. Oh, and about that shifter, my BMW here, first is still all the way left and up, but if you pull it hard to the left, and push it up, it will pop into reverse (don't know if I explained that well enough). Not all cars are that way though, and I haven't driven any japanese cars that way either.
I always assumed that Doglegs were only used on sports cars / road going versions of race cars (190e Cosworth, E30 M3) as when driving 'spiritedly' (on road or track) you're likely to need to change between 2nd and 3rd more often than 3rd and 4th, and this will be easier as 2nd and 3rd are directly above and below each other...