I know that for standing starts, using clutch is the fastest, but apart from that particular use, do people use clutch when driving, say, a GT car with paddle shifters?
Thanks! (-from a racing newb, trying to educate himself. 😁)
EDIT: Removed a part that created a debate about something that was not really relevant. It is still here in the quotes, but let’s just leave it.
This thread has devolved into people trying to understand how fuel and air mix to create boom so let's go back to your original question:
It depends.
Sequential technology has evolved quite a bit over the years. The first real modern ones appeared in the 90s but even those were much less advanced than current transmissions. First of all, they were fully mechanical and typically used a manual lever. The gears were selected sequentially by pulling the stick backward to shift up or pushing it forward to shift down (directions chosen to coincide with the g-forces the driver was experiencing thus making it easier to shift). But most of them still had to use the clutch fairly often due to the lack of electronic controls.
Typically on these older transmissions, the driver had to use the clutch on
every downshift. The engine didn't have any automatic rev-matching electronics, so to downshift the driver had to quickly clutch, rev the throttle, and bang the gear. It only took a split second but that was the operation. Usually they offered flat-throttle upshifting though since it was easy enough to either brute-forced the engine to pull its revs down, or to install a switch to cut throttle momentarily while the shifter or clutch was in use. In some cases the driver would have to let off the throttle just a little bit during upshifts to reduce tension in the driveline to allow the shift to happen (you can do similar things in a manual transmission without using the clutch). See this Viper GTS-R where you can see the driver
really driving the car especially on downshifts, using all three feet to clutch, brake, and hell-toe.
Eventually these tranmissions gained more electronics and tied the engine and transmission together. Nowadays, almost all cars have fully electronic shifting with no mechanical linkage at all, fully electronic rev-matching and clutching, etc. They only use the clutch to start and stop the car, however many cars also have some form of stall protection like F1 to prevent engine damage when they spin.
So the real big difference is that an old sequential manual was still a manual, just easier to use. Modern flappy paddles are exactly that, flappy paddles with no mechanical link to the transmission at all. Talk about easy mode.