👍 to
Famine's comments, and others here.
Hmmm, user error results in catastrophic loss? That's a dysfunction interface. Imagine if, for a moment, your computer exploded into bits if you clicked on a particular button in the operating system.
Even today's operating systems can 🤬 themselves over if you give them the wrong command. As the proverb goes, whenever you attempt to invent something foolproof, nature will invent a better fool.
What a generously adept comparison you've made, too. Consumers can potentially "brick" their system or otherwise impair their software by "jailbreaking" their smartphone or "soft-modding" their videogame console. However, doing those things (and pulling it off correctly) is the
only way to run any software you like and have complete control over your phone/console.
Such devices are already competent media outlets as shipped from the factory, and work just fine for most people. However, the possibilities become almost limitless once you perform the modification. All you're really doing is removing artificial software limitations on what you can do with the hardware (much like how a DSG, though offering many of the same primary benefits of a manual, imposes artificial limitations on your control of the drivetrain), but doing so provides the ultimate level of customization, choice of options, and flexibility of purpose.
Not everyone wants to jailbreak or soft-mod their stuff.
Some people do. Not everyone needs or wants the extra flexibility and control a manual transmission offers.
Some people do.
But there is an advantage I see for a manual. If you're poor and can't afford a car with a decent engine or a DSG, and you're worried about the car breaking down and having to repair it yourself or simply worried about getting the car home because it has 250,000 miles and things aren't working as well as they used to - the manual is cheaper, mechanically simpler, and more robust in these scenarios.
Why does a car have to be old and starting to fail before a manual transmission is justified? I imagine a DSG would have a harder time
reaching that point in a car's life in the first place.
Do you advocate a shift toward cars that are more "disposable" for the sake of what amounts to a technological
convenience?
You need this because.... ? there are a few answers that come to mind and none of them should be this high on the priority list.
The control. It's that simple.
There are certain things that a car can handle just fine on its own, and certain things that a driver should have control over. The line that separates those things will always be different depending on who you talk to (eg. synchros vs no synchros, defeatable traction control vs permanent traction control, etc.) but I, personally,
cannot stand not having the option or ability to dictate, physically and manually, when my engine sends power to the drivetrain. And slotting an auto/DSG into "N" just doesn't cut it.
Automatic transmission cars "creep." With no input at all, they'll automatically apply power to the wheels and roll forward; as I said in my last post, it's strenuous and highly annoying to have to "hold back" an automatic car while stopped in "D." Automatic drivers everywhere absent-mindedly bump into other cars (someone did it to me) and risk pulling out into cross-traffic if they happen to not hold down the brake enough. The solution is to shift into "N," but that's only a stopgap (and a difficult one with sloppy shifters) for the lack of a manual transmission. Why should I need to "manually shift" an automatic between "D" and "N" to
improve upon its convenience?
Most automatic cars (due to torque converter slip or whatever reason) hardly slow down in normal driving conditions unless you apply the brakes. Brake lights only offer "on/off," so you can't make minor adjustments to speed without giving the driver behind you the same exact signal (for a split second) as an emergency stop.
Traffic often backs up on busy freeways for exactly this reason -- jams caused by cascades of unnecessary brake lights. When behind the wheel of an automatic transmission car, it irritates me to
have no choice but contribute to this problem. You might say that it's more dangerous to slow down in front of people without illuminating your brake lights, and in this age of increasingly distracted drivers, that's probably true. But at least a manual transmission provides the
option to do it.
Furthermore, on an older car such as mine, similar to what you said about "poor" people (like me I guess), it would be inconvenient (or perhaps impossible) to drive in everyday situations if it had an automatic. A few of the workarounds I live with, thanks to the manual transmission:
- Coaxing the dysfunctional idle (which bounces incessantly if unattended) into a steady RPM by applying slight throttle input anytime I need to, without accelerating or having to shift into neutral
- Launching the car slowly and smoothly despite the unstable idle
- Cutting power to prevent the violent bucking the idle can cause when putting around in-gear near 1500 RPM
- Cutting power to kill wheel hop in the winter (not a problem with my last set of tires, but my current ones kinda suck in winter)
- Cutting power to kill wheelspin, perhaps while knowingly coasting across a patch of ice, or to end oversteer before it turns into a full spin (traction control is a stand-in for this, not the other way around)
- Bump-starting my car during the months my battery randomly died (fixed this, but I never worry about accidentally leaving the lights on for a few hours either)
My clutch serves as an easy fix for a nearly-impossible-to-diagnose engine problem (we've tried), a drivetrain-lash arrester, and a substitute for a set of jumper cables (plus another car to provide a jump). What can your automatic do?
It sounds like you really enjoy two things, driving, and operating a manual transmission. I prefer driving. If I wanted to operate a manual transmission, I'd have one in my house that I could play with when I got bored. You don't have to be driving to move a lever back and forth. You can do that anywhere.
I own a G25 and use it to play Live for Speed (best clutch and H-shifter simulation I've found), and I certainly have experience rowing the shifter in my car while stationary. Not even close to the same; the clutch and shifter are used in LFS
because it's as close as it gets. This argument is flawed.
Operating a transmission is not driving - it's operating a transmission.
Operating a clutch/shifter and pulling off a heel-toe downshift has
no less to do with driving than operating a steering wheel and smoothly swerving around a deer, or operating a brake pedal and pulling off a smooth emergency stop.
Sure, a computer can rev-match downshift for you
RIGHT NOW. It can also swerve around an obstacle for you
RIGHT NOW or brake to avoid that unexpected car for you
RIGHT NOW (see Mercedes-Benz's recent efforts in automated car safety). But does that mean there's no point in bothering with that stuff ourselves? Where do you think we should draw the line between cars as we know them now, and the "cars that drive themselves" of the fantasized, dystopian (IMO) future? What aspects of driving do automotive enthusiasts deserve to keep as a part of the fun (ignoring unyielding industry trends)?
As I understand it, you don't believe shifting/using a clutch should matter to anyone. I know people like to "har, har" at manual transmission purists by pointing out how people used to cling to synchro-less transmissions, but we're honestly talking about a much greater difference in control, with applications extending beyond the simple act of shifting. I believe manufacturers found a "sweet spot" in control vs convenience when they came up with the modern synchro'd manual transmission, and its oft-cited age only serves to illustrate the point.
Why should everyone abandon it when its only major flaw is a subjective perception of inconvenience among a subset of the population served perfectly well by other options?