The Mercury News

IN WITH AUTO, OUT WITH MANUAL

Once the ‘standard’ due to dependabil­ity, stick shift availabili­ty proved to be slim among auto industry at annual car expo

- By Charles Fleming

Visitors to the upcoming Los Angeles Auto Show will see supercars, hoverboard­s, self-propelling luggage and all manner of new transporta­tion options.

But they’ll be hard-pressed to find a clutch pedal or a stick shift. Available in nearly half of new models in the U.S. a decade ago, the manual transmissi­on is going the way of the rumble seat, with stick availabili­ty falling to about a quarter this year.

Once standard equipment on all motor vehicles, preferred for its dependabil­ity, fuel efficiency and sporty characteri­stics, the four-on-the-floor is disappeari­ng from major car manufactur­ers’ lineups — and subsequent­ly from the sprawling auto show’s floors.

This is as true of everyday sedans as of souped-up sports cars. Mercedes-Benz, Ferrari, Lamborghin­i, Alfa Romeo,

“It’s a disgrace. Yes, it’s more troublesom­e and expensive for the automakers. But it’s completely inexcusabl­e that Ferrari doesn’t even offer a manual.” — Karl Brauer, Kelley Blue Book senior analyst

Volvo, Lexus, Chrysler and Buick no longer offer a single model with manual transmissi­on. Audi, Jaguar, Cadillac and GMC offer only one.

“It’s a disgrace,” said driving enthusiast and Kelley Blue Book senior analyst Karl Brauer. “Yes, it’s more troublesom­e and expensive for the automakers. But it’s completely inexcusabl­e that Ferrari doesn’t even offer a manual.”

In 2006, 47 percent of new models offered in the U.S. were available with both automatic and manual transmissi­ons, according to a study by edmunds.com. By 2011, that number had dropped to 37 percent. This year, the number has fallen to 27 percent.

The actual sales figures are even lower. Edmunds senior analyst Ivan Drury said fewer than 3 percent of current U.S. car sales are manual vehicles — compared with 80 percent in some European and Asian countries, and down in the U.S. from 7 percent in 2012 and 25 percent in 1992.

“That number is never going to go back up,” Drury said. “The trajectory is down, headed for zero.”

The auto show, open to the public at the Los Angeles Convention Center from Nov. 18 to 27, will offer gear heads and prospectiv­e car buyers a look at 1,000 different vehicles — 50 of them making their first U.S. appearance­s — from 41 automakers, spread over 1 million square feet of display space.

For decades, almost all automakers offered almost all their vehicles with a choice of automatic or manual drive trains.

The stick shift had so long been the standard that a manual transmissi­on was actually known in the industry as a “standard” transmissi­on.

Driving enthusiast­s and bargain hunters preferred them, because cars with three pedals on the floor tended to perform better, get better gas mileage and cost less to buy — sometimes up to $1,000 cheaper.

But as automakers perfected the automatic transmissi­on, and learned to make it less expensive and more dependable, drivers became accustomed to the relative ease of leaving the shifting to the car.

Automatics gradually became the preferred option, and automakers began offering them in fewer vehicles, saving them money because they no longer had to manufactur­e two drive trains.

Ferrari’s product marketing chief Nicola Boari said the company decided to end all manual transmissi­on production because demand was “close to zero.”

Among the reasons: Cars equipped with the modern, more sophistica­ted automatic transmissi­ons now get better gas mileage than the manuals, fewer young people are driving — relying on public transporta­tion or ride-sharing services — and fewer are able to operate manual transmissi­ons.

Georgia Vassilakis, 21, learned to drive stick when her Ford-employee mother brought home a manual transmissi­on Fiesta. Few of her friends, Vassilakis said, can drive a stick. All are surprised that she can.

“For people of my age, it’s as if I knew how to speak Latin,” she said.

Most drivers who operate a stick learn from a friend or family member. Those who seek profession­al guidance might be out of luck.

A survey of 10 local driving schools found only one that offers instructio­n in stick shift driving.

“It’s really difficult,” said Hector Hernandez, of First Choice Driving School — which has one stick-savvy instructor on staff — by way of explaining why so few schools teach manual. “And it takes a really patient instructor to teach it.”

That’s too bad, experts say, on several levels. Knowing how to work a manual gearbox can still be cost effective, because in many parts of the world, a rental car with automatic transmissi­on is considerab­ly more expensive than a manual.

Some also argue that a manual transmissi­on forces drivers to remain focused on the road.

“The fact that you are required to pay more attention makes you a safer driver,” said Doug Herbert, founder of the nonprofit teen driver training program Be Responsibl­e and Keep Everyone Safe, known as BRAKES.

For Herbert, the safety issue is deeply personal. A profession­al drag racer, he started BRAKES in 2008 after his two teenage sons were killed in an automobile accident.

Radio host Adam Carolla, who collects and races vintage cars, said with a stick shift, drivers can’t “just lean back and go into autopilot mode.”

For a long time, you were also going faster with a stick. A good driver, with a manual transmissi­on, could get around a race track, or go from zero to 60 miles per hour, more quickly than a good driver with an automatic transmissi­on.

But that hasn’t been true for several years. The automatic gear boxes work better, and shift more efficientl­y, than any pro driver with a stick shift can.

That’s no matter to manual aficionado­s who say the stick is simply more fun.

“I want to be engaged by the car, and part of that experience is moving through the gears,” said auto enthusiast Spike Feresten, creator and host of the Esquire Network “Car Matchmaker” TV series. “All of my cars but two are manual. The only time I get into the automatic is when I know I’m going to be stuck in traffic on the 405.”

Several companies still offer sticks in selected models, where they used to offer them across their entire line. Ford, Honda, Toyota, Nissan, Kia, Subaru, Volkswagen and Hyundai sell a handful. Some customers are trying to maximize performanc­e, others to minimize cost.

“We recognize there are still consumers that appreciate the manual control of the power train,” said Derek Joyce, an executive with Hyundai.

“Beyond the fun and engaging aspect of a manual transmissi­on, it often lets us provide a more affordable and advanced power train combinatio­n,” said Paul Seredynski, Ford’s global performanc­e and power train communicat­ions manager.

Specific automobile­s, too, still draw customers to their stick shift formats. Mazda sells an estimated 60 percent of its MX-5 Miata sports car in the manual transmissi­on version the company said.

Fiat Chrysler reported similarly high numbers on its 124 Spider sports car, as did Nissan with its 370Z coupe. Subaru said stick shift percentage­s can go as high as 50 percent on a BRZ, WRX and STI performanc­e car, but as low as 10 percent on the more sedate Forester, Crosstrek or Impreza.

A percentage of Chevrolet Camaro, Dodge Viper and Dodge Challenger fanciers also prefer the stick. So do some buyers of the Ford Mustang.

Those Detroit giants will have some of the only stick shifts represente­d on the auto show floor including Ford’s Mustang GT 350/R and Chevy’s Camaro ZL1 Coupe and Corvette Grand Sport Coupe.

But a Jaguar spokespers­on said the “take rate” for manual transmissi­ons for its F-Type sports car — the only stick it offers, and available only in the base model with the V-6 engine — can be as low as 3 percent.

Stick availabili­ty is more widespread among European carmakers, a reflection of the transmissi­on’s popularity in Europe.

BMW offers 14 different models with an optional manual transmissi­on. Its subsidiary Mini builds stick shift versions of every car it sells in the U.S. All of Porsche’s 911 Carrera and Targa models can be had with a “standard” transmissi­on. So can all versions of the company’s new 718 series of Boxster and Cayman sports cars.

Porsche managed to monetize the increasing rarity of the stick shift by offering its limited-run 911R only with a manual transmissi­on. The German company built 991 units of the $185,000 two-door, and sold them all before it began production.

The company learned the opposite lesson when it built a high-end version of the 911, the GT3, featuring Porsche’s much-admired PDK automatic transmissi­on — but with no stick shift option.

“The purists, like me, were a little upset,” Feresten said.

In fact, the outcry was so strong that, sources around the company say, the next iteration of the GT3 will be offered in both manual and automatic modes.

“All of my cars but two are manual. The only time I get into the automatic is when I know I’m going to be stuck in traffic on the 405.” — Spike Feresten, creator and host of the Esquire Network “Car Matchmaker” TV series

 ?? ROBYN BECK/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? A 2017 Nissan Rouge is displayed under a Star Wars TIE fighter at the Los Angeles Auto Show, now called Automobili­ty LA, in Los Angeles. The LA Auto Show is open to the public from Friday through Nov. 27.
ROBYN BECK/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE VIA GETTY IMAGES A 2017 Nissan Rouge is displayed under a Star Wars TIE fighter at the Los Angeles Auto Show, now called Automobili­ty LA, in Los Angeles. The LA Auto Show is open to the public from Friday through Nov. 27.
 ?? FREDERIC J. BROWN/ AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? The Hyundai Ioniq sits on display during the first of two press days Wednesday at the 2016 Los Angeles Auto Show.
FREDERIC J. BROWN/ AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE VIA GETTY IMAGES The Hyundai Ioniq sits on display during the first of two press days Wednesday at the 2016 Los Angeles Auto Show.
 ?? FREDERIC J. BROWN/ AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Jon Ikeda, left, vice president and general manager of Acura, and Dave Marek, executive creative director of Acura, stand beside the new Acura Precision Cockpit on the first of two press days at the 2016 Los Angeles Auto Show.
FREDERIC J. BROWN/ AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE VIA GETTY IMAGES Jon Ikeda, left, vice president and general manager of Acura, and Dave Marek, executive creative director of Acura, stand beside the new Acura Precision Cockpit on the first of two press days at the 2016 Los Angeles Auto Show.
 ?? FREDERIC J. BROWN/ AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Shaun Wesbrook samples the new Acura Precision Cockpit.
FREDERIC J. BROWN/ AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE VIA GETTY IMAGES Shaun Wesbrook samples the new Acura Precision Cockpit.
 ?? CHRIS CARLSON/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A 2017 Mini Countryman is displayed Wednesday during the Los Angeles Auto Show.
CHRIS CARLSON/ASSOCIATED PRESS A 2017 Mini Countryman is displayed Wednesday during the Los Angeles Auto Show.

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