The Welland Tribune

Manual transmissi­ons still beloved by some

But automakers are stopping production due to lack of sales

- ROBERT DUFFER Chicago Tribune

The tween riding in the back seat finally asked, “What is that thing you keep moving up there?”

She had never seen “that thing” known as a six-speed stick shift, a manual transmissi­on, a manny tranny, a handshaker, a Millennial theft deterrent. To her it was a relic, an oddity, a rotary phone thingy.

Manual transmissi­ons account for just 2 per cent of all vehicles sold in 2018, according to data from Edmunds.com. In 2006, 47 per cent of new models in the U.S. were offered with automatics and manuals. Now it’s down to 20 per cent and dropping sharply.

“For automakers it will be simpler when the manual dies,” said Ivan Drury, senior analyst at Edmunds.com. “It’s kind of a hassle for them to offer both, same with dealers. Given the market forces, it’s going to go away.”

Not too long ago, when pushbutton AM radios were infotainme­nt and cigarette lighters were USB ports, all cars had manual transmissi­ons. In the ’50s, during the boom of babies, cars and America, GM’s Hydra-Matic automatic transmissi­on made driving accessible to everyone. No need to worry about grinding gears, stalling out or other operator errors.

In the half-century since, automakers and suppliers have advanced the automatic into something drivers never have to consider. Modern automatics are quicker, more efficient, much easier to operate and better than most drivers. Call it progress, the inevitable inexorable direction of taking control from the driver for the sake of automation, which incidental­ly, was first offered way back in the ’60s in the form of cruise control.

As consumers preferred the automatic, automakers stopped offering the manual to cut the costs of offering two powertrain­s.

“We have seen that buyers aren’t asking for them,” said Mark Gillies, spokespers­on for Volkswagen. “We had a manual option in the old Tiguan, but almost no one took it.”

There are few utility vehicles with a manual, including midsize pickups in the aging Toyota Tacoma and Nissan Frontier, as well as the six-speed manual in the new Jeep Wrangler. That clutch pedal has firm, almost abrupt kickback, and the gearbox is notchy enough to make it feel like you’re actually doing something in a vehicle that can conquer territory without much insight from the driver.

The remaining manuals are in subcompact commuter cars or sports cars.

“In our value vehicles, there is still a market for cost efficiency with a manual than a little higher priced automatic,” said James Bell, director of corporate communicat­ions for Kia.

But the manual take rate of 4 per cent for the Rio, Forte and Soul is hardly a business case.

The new Kia Stinger performanc­e sedan does not even come with a manual. The 365-horsepower rear-wheel-drive fastback competes with German benchmarks such as the BMW 3-Series, which has a manual with a take rate in the single digits.

“When you’re looking at performanc­e sedans for 2018, everyone has switched over to DSG and modern automatics or dual clutch gearboxes,” Bell said. “If you want to maximize performanc­e and accelerati­on of a car, an eight- to 10-speed gearbox is the way to go.”

Supercar-makers such as Ferrari and Lamborghin­i no longer offer manuals for performanc­e reasons. Even the famed Porsche 911, with its excellent PDK dual-clutch automatic transmissi­on, has a manual take rate of just 20 per cent.

“High-end automatic transmissi­ons like the PDK drive better than you and make you a better driver,” Drury said. “I don’t think a lot of people get to go out there and exercise the transmissi­on the way it should be.”

That’s as true on the street as it is in the virtual world.

“Even the video games are all PDKs,” said Mark Basso, founder and president of Autobahn Country Club in Joliet. “When we opened 14 years ago, the vast majority of cars on our track — maybe 90 per cent — were manuals. Now I would guess it’s 60 per cent automatics and climbing.”

Yet for some enthusiast­s or iconoclast­s and everyone we spoke to for this article, there’s no other way to drive than with a manual. Rowing your own gears is simply more fun.

“There is a feeling of great control as a driver, and there is the sheer physical pleasure of managing a perfect shift,” said Gillies, who, as the former executive editor of Car and Driver, has had enviable success on the race track. “I feel more in touch if I am operating the gears.”

Gillies taught both his children how to drive stick and Bell was planning to do the same.

“Driving is not stab it and steer,” Bell said on the eve of taking his daughter to get her driver’s permit. “It’s about appreciati­ng mechanical­ly what it takes to get up to highway speed and the respect for what it takes to get speed. The recognitio­n should encompass all your senses to not be distracted. It’s a safety thing.”

It’s a fun thing, too.

 ?? ROBERT DUFFER
CHICAGO TRIBUNE/TNS ?? Manual transmissi­ons account for just 2 per cent of all vehicles sold in 2018, according to Edmunds.com.
ROBERT DUFFER CHICAGO TRIBUNE/TNS Manual transmissi­ons account for just 2 per cent of all vehicles sold in 2018, according to Edmunds.com.

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