He says in the XR, which I take as the XRG and XRT. They are road cars which would have them. As for the XRR, well, you all know that the GTR cars have the same interiors of the road cars and are to be improved upon in the future.
The only class of cars that doesn't need indicators is the quickest class on the track. All others want indicators so they can let quicker cars through.
(Of course without the automatic-turn-off mechanism, so you can indicate longer than one turn.)
theres a difference between "indicators" and "indicator stalks". nearly all touring car and most GTR cars have indicators but they dont have indicator stalks. They use buttons or switches on a control panel instead.
An Australian car would be American if one didn't know any better. Holden is actually my middle name, symbolising the marriage between American and Australian cars.
...but manual in the traditional sense? through the steering column? :scared:
Lots of cars in the 40s and 50s had column shift manual boxes. Some, like the Lancia Aurelia, where very nice to use, and as intuitive as the modern 'normal' tunnel shift.
We had an old Chrysler with a column shift so that's basically American. But there's the Citroen DS that had column shift and I'm pretty sure France isn't in the US
Heh, I remember my '89 Toyota Hiace (Most fun I've ever had going sideways in a car... Aah, the memories. ) also had a manual column shift. Was there mostly to prevent passengers in the middle seat from having a seriously uncomfortable ride I assume. :bigeyes2:
You'll find most of them will actually have the production indicator stalks, unless they can't be used for some reason due to modifications to the steering column/driving position. There's no point in creating work for no reason.