Lodi News-Sentinel

Semis, the last bastion of stick shifts, are going automated

- By Adam Belz

Bryan Berg drives a semi with a 13-speed transmissi­on, and he’s been double-clutching and shifting gears in his rig for 30 years. He’s not about to start driving a truck that shifts automatica­lly.

“I just think it would be weird,” said Berg, who lives near Willmar, Minn., when he’s not driving. “Most of the drivers I know, they all say automatics are for people who don’t know how to drive a truck.”

That’s changing. The strictly manual transmissi­on is disappeari­ng from the cabs of semitraile­r trucks — and the strong economy is one reason why. In its place is a manual transmissi­on with a computer that automates the shifting of gears.

That’s different from the automatic transmissi­on that’s common in cars and light trucks.

Truckers tend to use the word automatic to describe newer gearboxes, however, and they have the same effect of freeing a driver from shifting gears.

Today, the vast majority of trucks rolling off assembly lines are outfitted with the newfangled transmissi­on, which is more efficient and quicker to learn at a time when haulers are eager to lower costs and desperate to find more drivers.

“In the next three to five years, pretty much everything is going to be automatic,” said Gary Pressley, president of Heavy Metal Truck Training in Eagan.

Regional and local trucking companies that use older trucks may hold on to manual transmissi­ons for longer, but the days of a trucker gear-jamming down the interstate in a 36-speed are coming to an end.

Over-the-road carriers face a longrunnin­g nationwide shortage of truck drivers, and the shift to automated transmissi­ons is accelerati­ng thanks to the ease of training new drivers to use them.

Most new drivers didn’t grow up driving a stick shift.

“Being able to get a driver and get them into a truck and trained and up and running as fast as possible becomes very valuable to a lot of companies,” said Wesley Slavin, onhighway marketing manager for Peterbilt, which now produces nearly 90 percent of its trucks with an automated transmissi­on.

The computers controllin­g automated transmissi­ons can “downspeed” — lower the revolution­s per minute of the engine at high speed — effectivel­y and are thus better at controllin­g gas consumptio­n and emissions.

While very experience­d drivers can coax close to the same gas mileage from a manual transmissi­on that a computer can get, new drivers cannot.

Also, the technology has improved in recent years. Early versions of an automated transmissi­on annoyed drivers.

The computer would shift too late or too soon, and experience­d drivers wanted nothing to do with being a passenger in a truck driven by a novice software program.

“I drove one probably 10 years ago, and I didn’t like it,” said Ken Steinfest, an 81-year-old from Antigo, Wis., who still drives a semi with a 13-speed manual transmissi­on, his white labradoodl­e in the cab with him.

The new transmissi­ons are now better integrated in the trucks and the computers have gotten more precise, evaluating engine torque, engine speed, vehicle speed and vehicle angle before shifting gears.

“It just shifts and you don’t notice,” Slavin said.

Brian Daniels, manager of Detroit Powertrain and component products for Daimler-Benz, which makes Freightlin­er trucks, said automated transmissi­ons were a niche market six years ago. But better products came on the market around 2015 and demand for them rose quickly since.

“There’s still the diehards out there, but there’s some conversion happening of the diehards, too,” Daniels said.

About 85 percent of Freightlin­er’s semis now have automated transmissi­ons, up from about 10 percent four years ago.

Truckers in Europe adopted automated transmissi­ons sooner than those in the U.S. Volvo, one of the handful of large truck manufactur­ers in North America, introduced its I-shift transmissi­on in Europe in 2002, and by the late 2000s about 75 percent of trucks in Europe were fitted with an automated transmissi­on.

Reluctance in the U.S. has now fallen away. At Schneider Trucking in Green Bay, Wis., all the new trucks they buy have automated transmissi­ons.

The kicker for driving instructor­s is increased safety, said Bill Collins, owner of Interstate Truck Driving School in South St. Paul. At a simulator at the school, one student practiced shifting gears on a 10-speed manual transmissi­on. In a gravel lot out back, two students practiced backing up, another inspected the undercarri­age of a truck using an orange pointer.

“Most of my students want to drive the manual and I try to talk them out of it,” Collins said. “The biggest reason is the safety.”

Collins said there’s less for drivers to worry about when they don’t have to shift gears. But some companies still have manual transmissi­ons because they don’t replace trucks as often as the big over-theroad carriers, so Collins still teaches students to drive a manual transmissi­on.

And not all drivers are persuaded that automatic is better.

Abdullahi Abdulle, from Columbus, Ohio, who was taking a break at Stockmen’s Truck Stop off Interstate 494 in South St. Paul, said he doesn’t mind shifting gears.

In fact, it helps keep him alert, he said. He’s been driving for three years and was waiting for a new load.

“Automatic, you just relax,” Abdulle said. “And when you relax, you may take a nap. On the road.”

 ?? JERRY HOLT/MINNEAPOLI­S STAR TRIBUNE ?? Cody Pinkerton learns how to shift a six-speed truck on a simulator at Interstate Driving School on Aug. 30 in South St. Paul, Minn.
JERRY HOLT/MINNEAPOLI­S STAR TRIBUNE Cody Pinkerton learns how to shift a six-speed truck on a simulator at Interstate Driving School on Aug. 30 in South St. Paul, Minn.
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