I can imagine they have light ones to increase acceleration but on the other hand those Hybrids are very powerfull at low RPM's + they are heavy.
anyone who can explain this, or maybe even say in which era's they were used
Haha I heard that too and was instantly triggered!Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑28 May 2018, 13:30iirc Mudflap's view is that the quill shaft enables shifting without use of throttle, ignition cut or fuelling cut ....
but yesterday I heard Mr Coulthard say that Alonso had a problem as he had lost his throttle blip
It would only need to rise the input shaft speed to that of what is engaging, not high RPM would it not?PlatinumZealot wrote: ↑29 May 2018, 23:35From when I started watching F1 in the early 2000's, throttle blip was touted a whole lot when talking about the 7 speed transmissions... so I always had it that throttle blip is still there - especially on the downshift. You can go for maximum acceleration/deceleration "letting it rip", where the shift time is shorter and no lift. And another time where shift speed is slower and a slight (maybe imperceptible? blip).
Sorry for the OT, but I´m curious about this. Did you call it gearchanges when it was a manual H-style gearbox and shifts with new semi-automatic gearboxes?