Spart
Well-Known Member
I'm from the US and I started out driving nothing but manuals. Manual tractors, in fact. One brake pedal for each rear wheel! A lot to manage at the age of 12, but I figured it out.In Europe we start off in manuals, so congratulations, you're as skilled as a 17 year old European. ?
Welcome to the cub scouts, have a cookie.
The reason the Europeans always get this wrong about American manual drivers is that people from Europe near-universally stop advancing their manual driving skills once they can successfully drive to the market without stalling. Sure, they get good enough to granny shift around at a pedestrian pace. That's not all there is to being skilled with a manual of course. But this level of skill is something almost anyone can learn in an afternoon, and it's not very impressive.
Put your average "17 year old European" on a track and 99% would make fools of themselves. Even if they've somehow learned how to rev-match a downshift (it's astounding how many Europeans are insistent on NOT rev-matching even after being made aware of their bad habit) you'd be hard pressed to find one in a hundred that can rev match smoothly while simultaneously braking. That's an important performance driving skill to master in order to drive at the limit on track without upsetting the car or locking up the driven wheels unintentionally. If you're trail braking and executing a downshift at the same time in a ham-fisted way, you're likely as not to spin a rear drive car.
Small wonder these same people often become convinced that a manual is an impossible handicap around a track, and that an auto is a "better" track experience.
You might say that Americans never learn to do any of this either, and that might be true to a point. But since Americans who drive manuals in the year 2023 by and large are enthusiasts, and Europeans who drive manuals by and large are not, I think you'll find a far larger percentage of American manual drivers have a more complete skillset than their European manual-driving compatriots, who are most likely just trying to get to work.
We have a different relationship with manual transmission cars over here, and we drive them differently. It is what it is. Porsche would almost certainly have gone all-PDK if not for American manual buyers. The manual take rate on the previous-gen GT3 was 70% here and 30% everywhere else. Porsche was shocked by this.
Unfortunately, Toyota does not allow you to order a car to your spec as Porsche does, so we'll never really know how many US buyers wanted manual Supras. Toyota decides how many to build ahead of time and that's that. Judging by the available inventory of manual Supras in the US, they aren't building enough. By how much is anyone's guess.
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