Wheels (Australia)

EXPLAINED: KIA’S INTELLIGEN­T MANUAL TRANSMISSI­ON (IMT)

A REVOLUTION­ARY CLUTCH-BY-WIRE SYSTEM THAT NOT ONLY SMOOTHS OUT MANUAL DRIVING, BUT SAVES FUEL TOO

- JESSE CROSSE

An automated by-wire clutch system that stops newbies kangaroo-hopping and saves fuel? Now that’s clever

KIA’S INTELLIGEN­T MANUAL TRANSMISSI­ON (iMT), with its clutch-by-wire system, set our antennae twitching because the crystal ball had been revealing only automatic and semi-automatic gearboxes as the solutions to staying on top of future emissions regulation­s. Clutch-by-wire is an electronic­ally controlled, electrohyd­raulic clutch actuation system specifical­ly designed to work with 48V mild-hybrid powertrain­s. One of the problems powertrain engineers have faced ever since emissions became a thing is the driver. No matter how skilled they are, drivers aren’t good at getting the best efficiency out of an engine and gearbox, and that’s why the ‘integrated powertrain’ approach evolved, with engines and automatic gearbox control systems linked so they can achieve the best economy. That’s all very well for more expensive cars, but for smaller, cheaper cars, autos can be a pricey overhead. Clutch-by-wire bridges the gap, allowing a manual gearbox to gain an added economy feature, namely coasting with the engine shut down. So far, this has only been possible with autos. Clutches are normally operated in one of two ways: hydraulica­lly or mechanical­ly by a cable. A hydraulic system usually consists of master and slave cylinders. The master is attached to the clutch pedal, while the slave physically disengages the clutch. With the clutch-by-wire system, the clutch pedal sends a signal to an electronic control unit and an electrohyd­raulic actuator (replacing the convention­al master cylinder) generates the hydraulic pressure. A slave cylinder opening the clutch is convention­al. Arguably, Kia has missed a trick in not opting for a completely ‘dry’ electromec­hanical system with an electrical­ly operated clutch mechanism and no hydraulics, but the chosen route could make packaging far more practical, especially in small cars, where nothing really needs to change in the design of the engine and gearbox. When the driver comes off the accelerato­r, either when cruising below 124km/h or to slow down for the lights or a junction, coasting can give a modest efficiency gain (Kia claims a CO2 reduction of three percent) by switching off the engine completely. There’s no downhill coasting, though. When the driver brakes, the engine kicks back in to benefit from regenerati­ve and engine braking. During coasting, the system works as it would with an automatic gearbox: the clutch opens (but without the driver pressing the pedal), the engine shuts down and the car coasts with the car in gear. If the driver has a change of mind and presses the clutch pedal to select another gear, or gets back on the accelerato­r or brakes, the 48V starter-generator restarts the engine. In that case, the engine will resume drive with mild electrical assistance from the starter-generator if the car has slowed and the selected gear is a little too high. Once at a standstill at the lights, the system behaves much as it would with normal stop-start, restarting the engine when the driver presses the clutch or accelerato­r pedal.

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