Wow, you really ARE slow.
You know... there is an AUP. And this doesn't really help your point.
As he said, when driving a manual, you have more things to consider (for the slow: PAY ATTENTION TO). Therefore, that KEEPS the driver's attention on what's going on around him or her
No. Having to pay attention to what gear your car is in, what revs your engine is at, what gear you're about to shift into, or how much you need to blip the throttle in order to make a smooth shift does not keep your attention focused on what's going on
around you. It keeps your attention on the process of operating the transmission in your vehicle. It doesn't help you avoid collisions. You've never even once asserted HOW driving a manual helps you concentrate on anything besides operating the transmission.
You're basically trying to say that driving a manual distracts the driver from driving by making him focus more on driving. Nice logic you have going.
Yes. Operating the transmission distracts you from pointing the car.
If driving a manual truly distracts you in any way, get an automatic. I'm far from the most experienced manual driver, but the only effects I've had as far as paying attention have been in a positive manner.
Well... you're lying to yourself. I can't operate a manual and not concentrate on what gear I'm in, what gear I need to be in, when I'm about to hit the redline, or whether I need to drop the clutch. I even think about it retroactively "did I use too much clutch just then? Did I over-rev? I used too much throttle and overshot the targeted engine speed didn't it?" And this is after ~10 years of experience driving manual transmissions.
Those thoughts and techniques are preventing me just a little from thinking every moment about which cars are where on the road and what they're doing.
Danoff: With every subsequent post you're being more and more of a complete pain in the arse. I've gone from thinking your posts were fair, to thinking you'd made a few dubious comments, to just thinking you're being a stubborn, argumentative git.
Well, I'm certainly glad you didn't resort to name-calling. It's big of you.
"Fewer things to consider" doesn't mean "less distracting".
YES IT DOES!
I can consider something without it being a distraction. I can also be free of distractions whilst I'm considering something. I can even be considering something, but be distracted by something else.
....WHAT?!?
Can you consider two things at once prefectly? How about 5?
So using my post over, and over, and over again to illustrate your own badly worded points doesn't serve any purpose.
It does. You've defeated your own argument. By admitting that autos require less effort to simply operate, you're admitting that one has more concentration available for the road. Whether you choose to use that concentration for good is not my concern.
The living room comment, if you'd read what I typed and not selectively read what you wanted to hear, was supposed to be a minus point.
I know what it was
supposed to be. Because I read it in it's entirety. But it simply isn't. Being easier to operate simply is not and cannot be a "minus" for driving safety. Your notion that operating the transmission requires more effort ergo more effort is being concentrated on driving fails to consider that operating the transmission is not helping you drive safer.
How much concentration do you require watching the TV? I'm guessing probably not a lot? But it's comfy right? Well that's the modern car. No concentration on the road required for most people, because they're not having to worry about giving the process of driving any of their attention.
Explain to me how concentration on shifting = concentration on the road.
- I wouldn't be "distracted" by swinging the bat, but it would require concentration to play the game. I'd be making a conscious decision to swing the bat so I hit the ball in the best way, but it's not a distraction.
The analogy is flawed. It would require concentration to play the game, but in this case playing the game = operating the transmission, not driving down the street.
That's the fundamental point I'm trying to get across, and it's sailing straight over your head.
I know what you're trying to say, but you haven't convinced me that it's right. Your thesis is that automatics promote a lack of concentration on the road because you don't have to concentrate on the transmission. But you haven't established any reason why that would be the case. Similarly, you're claiming that manuals promote greater concentration on the road because they require greater concentration on transmission operation. Again, you haven't established any reason that this is the case.
I simply submit that the one that requires the least concentration to operate offers the most capacity leftover for focusing on the road.
Dave
Not really, because eating is distracting you from driving, whereas changing gears in involving you in driving more.
But it's not involving you in focus on your surroundings. It's involving you in focus on operating your car.
Dave
The biggest cause of crashese on motorways is people not paying attention to their driving which is far easier to do when you have so little to focus on the drive becomes easy as opposed to being involved.
I'm sorry Dave, I'm just not seeing it. I get just as bored leaving my car in gear down the highway as I do leaving an auto in gear down the highway. In my experience, most accidents happen in parking lots or low speed, low visibility situations. In those situations, concentrating on where all the cars are around you is essential. Negotiating the clutch does not help with that.
Dave
but to claim that they are safer because they mean you have to pay less attention to your driving is imo an oxymoron.
Not "driving", "shifting". Operating your transmission isn't driving.
Dave
Less attention is far more dangerous than having to learn how to operate a stick.
I agree, less attention is dangerous. That's why I think bad drivers should be driving ATs.
Dave
Like a TV show or film even, too little going on and it's boring, too much and it's headache inducing.
So what are you saying? That we should let people choose how complex they like their car to be? That's silly.
I don't think driving a manual keeps you awake any more than an auto - especially in the scenario in which you're most likely to get bored - the freeway. Driving an auto and a manual on the freeway is exactly the same.
Dave
By your loginc driving should be you and the car, no radio, no gears, just go, stop and turn. Oh and no passengers, they're a distraction. Earlier you took the idea of operating gears to an extreme, well thats your argument taken to the extreme.
I fully agree. We can't regulate distractions out of cars. That's why I jumped earlier when someone claimed that people should not be eating in the car. I think people should be allowed to eat, talk on their phones, etc. while in the car. If they can't concentrate, pull them over, give them a ticket, take away their license, whatever.