mikegt2
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- Jul 13, 2020
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My question is when using paddle shifters is the transmission suppose to kick down a gear when you stomp on it ?

Yeah, with my learning curve it took about a year for me to actually focus on that in the manual.recently found out about the kick-down switch and honestly... so damn cool!
like rev up the car before downshifting?Manual cars ftw. Want to downshift, rev up downshift. If not, don't touch the gear shift. Simpler to drive.
I am sure, that during the summer while towing a few dirtbikes at about 110kph in 8th gear, I have tapped the right flappy paddle, to switch to manual (stays in 8th) then floored the accelerator, to the kickdown switch - but not depressing the kickdown switch - car stayed in 8th. (Drive mode was "comfort")In fact the car takes over and will downshift from 8th gear to 4th gear at 89 MPH, just like that.I'm not sure about the consistency of what @D.J. said about "all the way down" (sans kickdown): I'm pretty sure that my car has assumed control and downshifted there too, just not as dramatically? I need to test this more. Hah.
why exactly would I need to increase rpm before downshifting? I'm understanding the process but not the reason I guess.@SIMONGUEY
Yes. You need to raise engine rpm slightly before going into a lower (shorter) gear. Same for upshifting but opposite. You let the rpm's drop slightly before shifting. How slightly? Usually few hundred rpm - 300-500rpm, depends how the trans is geared and how fast you're going. At higher speeds the rpm difference is higher between gears.
If you don't raise the rpms yourself, (rev matching) the rpms will raise themselves for you when you dump the clutch after the gear change... Just won't be a smooth downshift if you don't blip the throttle on your downshift.why exactly would I need to increase rpm before downshifting? I'm understanding the process but not the reason I guess.
thank you for the answer tho!