@Bawbag - By a full throttle start I mean holding the car on the clutch then dumping it sending you off in a flurry of wheel spin before the auto-clutch has time to start burning it up for you.
What's your point the clutch is a device that connects the gearbox and engine together. Damage to the clutch is only possible by miss using both devices it is connected to at the same time. If you feel the clutch is independent of everything else in LFS then no wonder you're burning them up all the time.
The G25 has sparked wider clutch pedal ownership, although still isn't the only viable or cheapest method of entry. The power bar itself is a horribly arcadey feature in the same way the tire temps and suspension damage are. I'd really like to see them all removed but it'll only increase whining.
The clutch is an independent component that can be mated to a different engine and gearbox if you want it to. It acts separately, you nearly always know pretty much instantly using a bit of common sense whether you've got a drivetrain, engine or clutch issue. Trying to make it sound minor is silly, both of our cars have spent multiple races sitting out with clutch issues over the years and both have been push started by yours truly and raced with seized clutches. In contrast we've only had less engine related retirements on both cars, only ever bent valves from over revving/missing shifts on the CVH and a weird ECU issues.
What's your point the clutch is a device that connects the gearbox and engine together. Damage to the clutch is only possible by miss using both devices it is connected to at the same time. If you feel the clutch is independent of everything else in LFS then no wonder you're burning them up all the time.
The G25 has sparked wider clutch pedal ownership, although still isn't the only viable or cheapest method of entry. The power bar itself is a horribly arcadey feature in the same way the tire temps and suspension damage are. I'd really like to see them all removed but it'll only increase whining.
The clutch is an independent component that can be mated to a different engine and gearbox if you want it to. It acts separately, you nearly always know pretty much instantly using a bit of common sense whether you've got a drivetrain, engine or clutch issue. Trying to make it sound minor is silly, both of our cars have spent multiple races sitting out with clutch issues over the years and both have been push started by yours truly and raced with seized clutches. In contrast we've only had less engine related retirements on both cars, only ever bent valves from over revving/missing shifts on the CVH and a weird ECU issues.