I think the argument is not that DCT cars are not fun to drive it's that they are not as fun to drive as manual cars. I really do not understand why DCT in sports cars are so popular. I mean, I do understand why people buy them, but I just don't get why those people are buying sports cars in the first place.
1: That's an opinion.
2: DCT are popular because it improves performance, fuel efficiency, & it's a much better option in today's world.
3: Whether a manual makes the car as fun or not, no one here as driven the new M3, so it's impossible to make any real claim to if it's a fun car to drive or not, regardless of transmission.
A majority of people are not going to be able to even use a car to its full potential whether it's manual, DCT, or automatic. Some of this has do to regulations on public roads (where they likely spend most of their time) but most of it comes down to them not having nearly enough driving skill to fully use the car. So the argument that DCT is faster really carries no weight. Sure for drag racing or freeway battling it may be better, but then the M3 isn't really good at either of those.
Your argument doesn't really hold any sort of validity because what's the point of building any sort of sports car, then, if most people can't drive them to their full limits?
To me, if someone wants an automatic car they should buy a luxury car instead of a sports car. If you don't want to shift why have anything else that attempts to make the car in any way sporty? I feel that if someone buys a car like an M3 with an automatic transmission would be better off with an E550.
Transmission has no end-all bearing on how a car is defined. End of story.
Just my opinion but if I am going to buy an automatic car I rather buy a Rolls Royce Phantom than a Ferrari FF or a similarly priced sports car with an automatic transmission. Automatic is not sporty and never will be as raw as manual.
The issue here is you classify both transmissions as 2 different things. I've driven a Superleggera & the E-Gear is miles better & more engaging than most other cars I've had the chance to drive with a manual.
And again, that's opinion.
I just don't get it, to me if you buy a DCT you probably don't really care about driving so why buy a car with stiffer suspension, less comfortable seats, and less luxurious amenities. At least with a luxury car you get high end gadgets and fancy materials (because weight does not matter) which make the car in some way enjoyable.
Again, transmission selection is not the ultimate cause of how a car is defined as sports or luxury. There can be a mix there.
If someone is buying a sports car in the first place why not buy a manual car so you get the full driving experience. If you want automatic just buy a luxury car, at least then you can be comfortable doing nothing while driving.
So, really, you're just another manual elitist. Got it.
It's as if people want the sports car but don't want it to be sporty.
Have you driven a car with a proper DCT-esque transmission? A Cayman S with a manual or PDK, is still a sporty car. There is no argument there.
Most people wouldn't buy a Rolls Royce with a manual transmission so why are they buying a Porsche 911 or Ferrari with an automatic.
Because a Rolls Royce is considered the bar of luxury. It's not a car you're even supposed to drive
to begin with.
And before anyone says PDK or any other DCT is not technically an automatic, I already know that. And that is fine if they aren't, but they are both operated by the driver in the same fashion and as far as the user is concerned they might as well be identical.
Then you've never driven one, else you'd know how a proper DCT acts.
True. The thing that I don't like is when companies don't even offer a manual transmission, like Ferrari and likely other companies in the future. At least offer a manual transmission. People are getting to caught up in speed and forgetting what is fun. If people bought them 10 years ago why aren't they anymore?
You know whose fault that is? People like you, the consumer.
Ferrari
gave buyers 1 more chance to have a gated manual right before the 458 because of people just like you, crying that it was still a highly desired transmission. At the end of that following year, the majority of Ferraris made were ordered with F1-SuperFast II transmissions. Take into account that a gated manual was
standard & people still wanted the more expensive paddle-shift transmission.
Like Lamborghini, the gear-stick manual is no longer worth the cost of production for Ferrari because not enough people order it to validate the engineering costs.
And what's fun to you is not fun to everyone else.
I could understand using paddle shifters and sequential transmissions on a race car because it is faster and manual shifting could slow down a good driver. But most people aren't good enough drivers for that to happen. And many people who buy DCT transmissions won't even take their car to the track anyway. I think it's more marketing than anything, now people can buy what is essentially an automatic car but believe they are driving manual or using what is used in race cars.
1: This goes right back to the whole point of sports cars to begin with if no one can use them to their full potential.
2: Many people who buy manuals don't track them either, so irrelevant.
3: Again proving that you have most likely never driven a proper DCT or you'd know exactly how it behaves.
It seems to me that often, not always, people who buy sports cars with DCT transmissions are the same kind of people who buy something nice because it is a status symbol not because they actually enjoy it. They don't really want a sports car, they want the status and image associated with the car. And to me that's pretty much the lamest thing someone could do.
This is pretty much the lamest argument against DCT transmissions someone could conjure up.
I guess I'll just never understand it. If I wanted automatic I'd just buy a luxury car, at least then it makes sense. If someone buys DCT sports car instead of manual for situations like a daily commute through heavy traffic it kind of takes the whole point away from owning or driving a fast car in the first place.
You'll never understand as long as you make ignorant statements about it. There are people who daily commute manual Porsches & that's all they do with it. What makes them such better owners?
Back to BMW, this is the article where it says the next M5 won't be manual but the M3 will offer it.
http://www.autoblog.com/2012/06/21/next-bmw-m5-to-drop-manual-transmission-option/
It may have been posted before or even out dated. Like others have said it appears that BMW is offering a six speed on the next gen M5. Maybe BMW got too many complaints?
Or maybe like Ferrari, enough people said they wanted it in the US. I'll put money on it that the number of manuals ordered is miniscule compared to the DCT.
The point is not that manual is always better, or even sportier when comparing two or more cars. A 458 is much more of a sports car than a manual Honda Civic is. But that's not the argument I am making. You are right that the overall package is much more important.
The argument is that in a given car a manual transmission will give the driver a purer, more connected, and ultimately "sportier" feeling than an automatic or DCT will.
Except that's nothing more than your opinion being presented as fact.
Imagine a Porsche GT3 with PDK vs a 6-Speed (possiblly 7-speed) manual. PDK is good but does not connect the driver with the car nearly as much and most car enthusiasts would argue that PDK is not as fun as the manual option. Imagine the same with a ZR-1, BRZ, M3, Lotus, etc.
Most car enthusiasts are nothing more than biased fanboys who've never touched a proper sports car in their life.
To reiterate, I've driven a Cayman S with both transmissions. The manual is fun, but the PDK offers its own world of enjoyment, esp. coming in & out of turns when you can remain focused on the road.
For a given package a manual transmission is likely to make the car more of a sports car than an automatic transmission.
False.
Likewise, as you said automatic does not equal luxury. But for a given car automatic is likely more luxurious than manual. A Rolls Royce with a manual transmission would not be as luxurious as one with an automatic.
A Rolls Royce with any sort of transmission is going to be luxurious. It's quite possibly the most luxurious car on the current market. But, it's not a car you're suppose to drive yourself anyway.
In that way the automatic makes the car better at what it is designed to do. Much like a manual transmission in a sports car makes the car more sporty because it is more interactive and engaging than an automatic or DCT. In my opinion a manual transmission makes a sports car better at what it is designed to do and that is to ultimately be fun and engaging, not just fast.
You're right, that's
your opinion. It obviously is not the opinion of the manufacturers though, if they are out to build the fastest sports cars in the world & a Dual Clutch Transmission improves that goal.
What makes a car fun & engaging is how it drives. A 458 & MP4-12C are twins separated at birth, but the redhead is the one that receives praise for driving like a proper Ferrari whilst the McLaren is met with mixed reviews.
Don't see why they are pulling manuals either, if your company bills driving fun and driving involvement, a manual is a must have option, performance and how "sporty" it is has no relation.
Except what goes into making a car fun & involving goes beyond the transmission.
Manual gearbox is a mellowed and perfected technology, it is always going to be cheaper to build, lighter, and have more reliability records than PDKs
I'd ask for proof, but I know it's an incorrect statement.
1: If manuals are so perfected, why is the manufacturer moving onto DCTs, or hell, autos in general? Is it because it improves performance? Perhaps fuel efficiency?
2: Cheaper to build is also false. Ferrari & Lamborghini find it more cost effective to build their cars to accommodate F1-SuperFastII/E-Gear because that's what the market majority demands; keeping manuals as an available option means the car has be re-engineered to fit them.
3: I have seen nothing that says manual gearboxes are more reliable than PDK. Maybe 10 years ago, that'd be true, but the transmission has come so far in terms of evolving that it's likely to be as dependable as a manual. Probably why Ferrari & Lamborghini also sort their paddle shift gearboxes as being more dependable to hold 700+ horses. It's definitely a reason why Bugatti went with a DCT to hold 1,000+hp if their goal was to make the Veyron a usable car.
....actually remember the days when manufacturers don't build their own gearbox but source from companies like Getrag? Ferrari 575 and Murcielago all had manuals....so as the Mclaren F1, and those were at least 10 year old cars! Cost is hardly a factor. They can perfectly afford 5% of manual models per overall production.
They still do to this day. Getrag builds the transmissions in BMW as well as Ferrari & Mercedes. Lamborghini receives their transmissions from Graziano as does McLaren. BorgWarner builds the GT-R transmission & iirc, Ricardo builds the transmission in the Veyron.
Not sure why that even matters though since these exact companies were building the manual transmissions for the same manufacturers. Ricardo was the builder for the Ford GT's transmission.
And you can claim cost is hardly a factor, but unless you have access to the finance books, that's a hard claim to make. Plus, even if they can afford it, it makes perfect sense as a business to phase out what the consumer no longer wants, esp. when you gave the consumer one last chance to purchase what they wanted.
The M heritage cannot be without a hardcore option, it's the halo in their "ultimate driving machine" fantasy, I think it is just accountants taking over the driving enthusiast side of BMW, of course you can say "this is business, they have to maintain profit." But history tells us everytime a sports car line goes overly soft (R33 GTR, Golf GTI Mk IV, second gen CRX) you end up with a forgettable generation of cars with crap resell values.
Those cars went soft for more than just a transmission....
so imo this move makes no sense, at all.
Like TVC, it probably doesn't make sense because you only choose to see one side of it.