
Sheep
Audioholic Warlord
F1 cars don't use the style of triptronic you're thinking of. Modern day Triptronic transmissions are basically automatics that your shift. They still have a TC, and they are still slower then a good stick.I disagree!I learned to drive on a 4 speed renault 5 (le car, as it was called in the U.S.), I actually like driving a stick. But I also drive through heavy traffic often and that's when the fun ends. Tiptronic brings SOME of the fun of the stick shift, but only when you want it. Formula 1 race cars actually have paddles at the wheel to shift up and down, no cluth and stick; so tiptronic is more like an F1 than a traditional stick.
F1 cars use sequential gear boxes.
SheepStarWikipedia said:Formula One cars use semi-automatic sequential gearboxes with six or seven forward gears and one reverse gear. The driver initiates gear changes using paddles mounted on the back of the steering wheel and electro-hydraulics perform the actual change as well as throttle control. Clutch control is also performed electro-hydraulically except from and to a standstill when the driver must operate the clutch using a lever mounted on the back of the steering wheel. By regulation the cars use rear wheel drive. A modern F1 clutch is a multi-plate carbon design with a diameter of less than four inches (100 mm), weighing less than 2.20 lbs (1 kg) and handling 900 hp (670 kW) or so.
Variable shift gearboxes have been long banned, thus creating heated contention in the introduction of the new seamless shift gearbox, which eliminate the split-second loss of drive during a gear change. The ultimate advantage of this is said to be from five to ten seconds over a complete race distance, which is a significant gain when races are sometimes only won by three seconds or less.