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![]() "RG" wrote in message . .. Watching that for the second time, I was a bit surprised by the shifting characteristics of the SMG. I was expecting the shifts to be more quick, more like what you might hear in an F1 car. Listening to the upshifts in the M6, they sounded very much like a shift that would take place with a conventional manual transmission, by a competent driver, but a driver that was being fairly conservative and kind to the car.. Clean and precise, but with a very noticeable drop in engine revs and corresponding drop in power delivery during the shift, very much unlike the nearly instant shifts without power delivery interruption that you would hear in an F1 car using what I understand to be the same basic technology. Perhaps due to the particular selection of the many program options of the SMG that the driver of the M6 chose for that run? I understand that BMW is bring a conventional manual to the M5 and M6 soon, much to the delight of the detractors of the SMG. I'll have to go back and view it again, but I know the person driving the M6 and am sure he was using the "S6" mode. In S6 the shifts are almost violent (you can see the camera jerk each time he shifts) and they occur extreemly fast .... something like 50 milliseconds or something. You keep your right foot to the floor and there is no drop in engine RPM until the next gear engages. You might have been seeing the car hitting the rev limiter a couple of times that will drop the RPM off slightly. This occurs at 8,250 RPM and it is hard not to hit it in 2nd or 3rd because the car is accellerating so fast. Eisboch |
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