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Re: Manual cars face extinction as congestion triggers a clutch backlash
Posted: Sun Aug 06, 2017 10:28 am
by IMBoring25
Well, it's pretty hard to find a manual in a scooter. As for bigger conveyances...
There is a company called Ridley making automatic motorcycles.
The Can-Am Spyder reverse trike has both manual and paddle-shift options and the majority are apparently sold with the latter.
There are aftermarket companies making automatic clutches for Harleys.
Re: Manual cars face extinction as congestion triggers a clutch backlash
Posted: Sun Aug 06, 2017 1:22 pm
by Rope-Pusher
IMBoring25 wrote:Well, it's pretty hard to find a manual in a scooter. As for bigger conveyances...
There is a company called Ridley making automatic motorcycles.
The Can-Am Spyder reverse trike has both manual and paddle-shift options and the majority are apparently sold with the latter.
There are aftermarket companies making automatic clutches for Harleys.
I Pity the Foos!
Re: Manual cars face extinction as congestion triggers a clutch backlash
Posted: Sun Aug 06, 2017 5:54 pm
by ClutchFork
Rope-Pusher wrote:So, I've heard that, in an alternate universe, there is a planet like ours, except that the inhabitants ride 2-wheeled conveyances they referr to as "motorcycles".
Do any of you know if, in that alternate universe, the "motorcycles" are also tending to stray from the Amish faith?
I am not aware of any automatic motorcycles, but that Honda made on back maybe in the 1980s that apparently was a flop. However, that same article I quoted does mention automatic shifting being an advantage for road racing motorcycles because it keeps the power steady to the wheels to maintain the desired traction through a curve where shifting mid-curve changes the contact patch significantly.
But it seems the Amish know about good riding habits:
