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Any tips on driving a stick?

Started by BIRD67, May 24, 2009, 03:38:39 PM

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BIRD67

Okay, yesterday my uncle took me up to his parents house so he could teach me how to drive a stick.. Now he likves in the backwoods so it proved rather difficult to drive.. The truck is a '93 Ford Ranger with a 4 banger and a 5 speed.. I learned that I am not very good with my eye-hand-foot coordination.. I must have stalled the truck at least 75 times yesterday.. DOes anybody have any really good tips on driving a stick shift? I am 15 so I am starting young.. I had a bad habit of riding the clutch.. It was hard to shift because the scyncros (I think I spelled that wrong..) are screwed up.. I am going to be practicing every Saturday..
I will not make any deals with you. I've resigned. I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own. I resign. -Number 6, The Prisoner

R.I.P. Matthew Fraser 4/30/10

WingCharger

Just got to tell when your engine is ready to be shifted, and to keep the engine running high enough for that gear. :2thumbs: Once you get used to it, you won't want to drive a automatic. :icon_smile_big:

472 R/T SE

Aaah yes, to be 15 again.  I had a bodacious blonde teach me how to drive her /6 '70, 3 speed Camaro when I was that age.
I was to eventually own it so she was "teaching" me.

If the rig is set up right you'll feel the clutch start to grab when you almost completely let off.  That's when you start giving it fuel.

You need to find an incline to where the rig rolls backwards so you can practice judging where the clutch grabs.  The stops & taking off are the hardest parts.  I suggest downshifting when you come to a stop to get a hang of grabbing gears.

I'm sure some folks will want to say I'm full of sh%t but it's worked for me.  I was running two gear boxed oilfield rigs outta high school...

BIRD67

Quote from: 472 R/T SE on May 24, 2009, 03:53:38 PM
Aaah yes, to be 15 again.  I had a bodacious blonde teach me how to drive her /6 '70, 3 speed Camaro.
I was to eventually own it so she was "teaching" me.

If the rig is set up right you'll feel the clutch start to grab when you almost completely let off.  That's when you start giving it fuel.

You need to find an incline to where the rig rolls backwards so you can practice judging where the clutch grabs.  The stops & taking off are the hardest parts.  I suggest downshifting when you come to a stop to get a hang of grabbing gears.

I'm sure folks will want to say I'm full of sh%t but it's worked for me.  I was running two gear boxed oilfield rigs outta high school...

That is exactly what my uncle had me do.. SInce we were in the backwoods it was really hard because the truck kept wanting to bottom out..
I will not make any deals with you. I've resigned. I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own. I resign. -Number 6, The Prisoner

R.I.P. Matthew Fraser 4/30/10

Mike DC

QuoteAaah yes, to be 15 again.  I had a bodacious blonde teach me how to drive her /6 '70, 3 speed Camaro.
I was to eventually own it so she was "teaching" me.

Hmm . . . was that all she taught you?   :scratchchin:

Tilar

Quote from: 472 R/T SE on May 24, 2009, 03:53:38 PM
You need to find an incline to where the rig rolls backwards so you can practice judging where the clutch grabs.  The stops & taking off are the hardest parts.  I suggest downshifting when you come to a stop to get a hang of grabbing gears.

That's kinda what I would suggest. Even if you just do starts and stops on level ground until you get comfortable with it. Once you're comfortable with that, shifting will be a piece of cake.
Dave  

God must love stupid people; He made so many.



Silver R/T

been driving stick since I was 17, easiest things I've learned in my life.
http://www.cardomain.com/id/mitmaks

1968 silver/black/red striped R/T
My Charger is hybrid, it runs on gas and on tears of ricers
2001 Ram 2500 CTD
1993 Mazda MX-3 GS SE
1995 Ford Cobra SVT#2722

Ghoste

Quote from: BIRD67 on May 24, 2009, 03:38:39 PM
.. I learned that I am not very good with my eye-hand-foot coordination.. I must have stalled the truck at least 75 times yesterday..

Don't be too hard on yourself, it's just a case of practicing.  Relax and feel what the car is doing around you, it'll come.

Sublime/Sixpack

  A real simple way to get a feel for engaging the clutch is to adjust the engine idle up on the carb to something like 1300 RPM, then on level ground push in the clutch pedal, put the trans in first gear then just practice letting the clutch out slowly and smoothly until the vehicle is underway (Without touching the accelerator pedal), then push the clutch in and apply the brakes to come to a stop then start all over again.
1970 Sublime R/T, 440 Six Pack, Four speed, Super Track Pak

Brightyellow69rtse

youll get it it just takes a bit of time. if you can find a atv or dirt bike this should help you quite a bit just top get the idea of it.

i learned to drive a stick when i bought my charger in 1999 i was 19 lol.  the tranny was trashed when i bought it so i figured why not learn on now lol.  it was rough for while, the new cars are night and day to drive over the older ones. new cars trannys just pretty juch find their way into gear. the old 4 speeds you gotta PUT em in gear.

i prefer sticks if at all possible.

oh yeah dont sleep on the clutch. get on it and get off it.

wayfast1500

Grind em till you find em! If the truck has 4w/d put it in 4 low.  That will help you feel the friction point.  Within a week or 2 you won't even have to think about it and it's like riding a bike, after a few years of autos I got a 5 speed firebird and never stalled when I jumped in it.

C_stripes

I wish I knew how to drive a stick.      :icon_smile_big:
I'm smarter than I act, But I don't act smarter than I am.

Rolling_Thunder

I learned when I was 13 myself...      it just takes time...   I learned in about 10 minutes but was not comfortable with it until i had about 30-40 hours of practice...    shifting becomes second nature and you don't even think about it after a while...    sounds weird now but you'll know what I mean. 
1968 Dodge Charger - 6.1L Hemi / 6-speed / 3.55 Sure Grip

2013 Dodge Challenger R/T - 5.7L Hemi / 6-speed / 3.73 Limited Slip

1964 Dodge Polara 500 - 440 / 4-speed / 3.91 Sure Grip

1973 Dodge Challenger Rallye - 340 / A-518 / 3.23 Sure Grip

Todd Wilson

Be thankful its not a non synchro 4 speed!   :icon_smile_big:


The clutch takes time. Take it easy on everything and it will eventually come to you.


Todd

mauve66

Quote from: Sublime/Sixpack on May 24, 2009, 09:56:53 PM
  A real simple way to get a feel for engaging the clutch is to adjust the engine idle up on the carb to something like 1300 RPM, then on level ground push in the clutch pedal, put the trans in first gear then just practice letting the clutch out slowly and smoothly until the vehicle is underway (Without touching the accelerator pedal), then push the clutch in and apply the brakes to come to a stop then start all over again.

exactly how i would teach, (even if you don't have a carb equipped vehicle to practice on, the principle is still the same) you have to get used to hearing/feeling the moment of engagment (keep the stereo off) let the clutch out slowly until you hear/feel it then push it back in, REPEAT it until you get comfortable with the angle of your leg doing this than move to the next step, adding the accelerator pedal as you let COMPLETELY off the clutch pedal then push it back in and come to a stop then REPEAT until its smooth. don't be in a rush to get to 5th gear, 2-5th gear changes are easy once you get the feel down in 1st gear
Robert-Las Vegas, NV

NEEDS:
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bull

Driving a stick is more art than science. It just takes a lot of practice unless you've got an innate talent for it.

dodgecharger-fan

and you have to re-learn the "feel" in every car you get in to - but it IS easier once you've learned in one car because you know what you're looking for.

bigcountry

Just rev 'er up to about 2800 rpm and let the clutch pedal go :yesnod:  That should get ya moving
Cut to size, Beat to fit, Paint to match.

2Gunz

Everytime I have taught how to drive standard, I have explained how the clutch works.

This seems to dramatically decrease the learning time.

Its no longer a mystery and why its stalling makes sense.

When i was 14 I taught a very inept woman who was about 30 to drive a stick.
We where stranded and it was the only option short of me driving...... which she didnt go for.
Didnt take very long to tech her but in her favor it was a honda and REALLY easy to drive.


Anyway if you dont know EXACTLY how the clutch works go read.

If you do then I got nothing!

Happy gear mashing!

moparnole

Simple, just get the revs up to about 4500, then take your foot off the clutch real quick,lol.
But really in my Supra I just start it off at about 1,500 rpm's, then give it clutch and off I go. I usually shift at about 3000-5000, depending on my mood, and how fast I want to go. Just keep practicing, and you will get it, It took my a while to stop going to first when I wanted to go to third, or wanting 4th, but getting 2nd.

Skinypete

To get a feel for where the clutch catches, put the ranger in 4-low.  You should be able to let the clutch out and not have to hit the gas.  When you get the hang of that take it out of 4-low.  Thats how I learned to drive my 94 Jeep Cherokee in my back yard.
DJMIII

Neal_J

Clutch In, Shift, Clutch Out.  The rest is practice and feathering the throttle.

That's how I learned.

Neal

Ghoste

If it helps I could loan you my father and he could holler at you for even the slightest error.  It didn't seem like much help at the time when he did it to me but I seemed to figure it out anyway so it must not have hurt.  :shruggy:

BIRD67

Quote from: Ghoste on May 26, 2009, 05:30:26 PM
If it helps I could loan you my father and he could holler at you for even the slightest error.  It didn't seem like much help at the time when he did it to me but I seemed to figure it out anyway so it must not have hurt.  :shruggy:
Ahh, thanks for the offer man, but ahh, no thanks! I get hollerd at enough here and at school, last thing I need is another person hollering at me :icon_smile_cool:
I will not make any deals with you. I've resigned. I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own. I resign. -Number 6, The Prisoner

R.I.P. Matthew Fraser 4/30/10

jaak

Man this just makes me think of memories... when I was like 10 or 11 my Dad had a 75 Dart, Slant 6, 3 speed column shift, I remember me asking him wheres the thing that says P,R,D and so on. He explained to me it was straight shift, then explained it to me while he was driving.. then he would let me set next to him (bench seat) and when it came time to shift gears, he'd let me shift. When I got a little older I learned to drive in a pickup.
All the trucks I owned in my late teens early 20's was all sticks, then when I was 24 I bought my first automatic, I am still driving it today... 8 years later.
I guess being in my 30's now, I would hate to have a stick for a daily driver, but I got the 73 Charger to take for a spin when I get the itching to bang my own gears.

Jason