MerlintheMad
10000 Posts Club!
The Stinger is my first car w/ paddle shifters as well and I don't know how to drive manual either so I'm a big noob.
@Geodude: I advocate for FUN. Paddle shifting is fun. Learning is fun. You can't break anything; the car will redline and bounce into an upshift if you don't pull the right paddle quickly enough. You'll look and sound like the noob you are. So what? If that bothers you, go somewhere that you can have a back road pretty much to yourself and practice.I strongly urge you to leave your car in auto and stay away from the paddles.
Peak torque on our cars is 1,300 to c. 4,500 RPM. So in a "spirited" corner, full control of the accelerator comes in there. A controlled drift would be achieved in that RPM range. Performance shifting, as @eflyguy says, is something else entirely. And I'd have a lot to learn there as well.
But driving on the street and using paddles has nothing to do with keeping your revs high like that. It's all about upshifting when the engine allows it, i.e. when RPMs are high enough: if you try an upshift at too slow a speed from too high a gear, the engine will ignore all your pulling on the right shifter.
