After watching some in-cabin professional driving clips online, such the WRX STI sedan setting the lap record at the Nurburgring one, I noticed that those drivers could change gear (for instance, up shift) very quickly in just one motion, rather than the two-stop motion that I have every day: stop at neutral, and then go into the next gear. 1st - 2nd and 3rd - 4th are okay, but 2nd to 3rd and 4th to 5th are always very slow and takes a lot of time.
Some times it just feels like that in the video clips the cars were having diagonal gear gates instead, if you know what I mean here.
So the question is: Are they really having some special gearboxes to allow the diagonal movement, or are they just brute forcing the shifter?
For your convenience, here are two videos that I noticed the driver could change gear extremely fast.
1: Subaru STI around the 'Ring: Subaru WRX STI sedan Nurburgring record lap with Tommi Mäkinen - on-board footage - YouTube
2: Dodge Viper around the 'Ring Dodge Viper ACR Record Run on Nurburgring - YouTube
Any insight would be greatly appreciated. Thanks a lot!
P.S.: I'm not trying to race and I have absolutely no plan to track my car (completely stock 2011 WRX with a OEM short throw shifter). But I was fascinated by how these drivers could change gears so quickly.
Some times it just feels like that in the video clips the cars were having diagonal gear gates instead, if you know what I mean here.
So the question is: Are they really having some special gearboxes to allow the diagonal movement, or are they just brute forcing the shifter?
For your convenience, here are two videos that I noticed the driver could change gear extremely fast.
1: Subaru STI around the 'Ring: Subaru WRX STI sedan Nurburgring record lap with Tommi Mäkinen - on-board footage - YouTube
2: Dodge Viper around the 'Ring Dodge Viper ACR Record Run on Nurburgring - YouTube
Any insight would be greatly appreciated. Thanks a lot!
P.S.: I'm not trying to race and I have absolutely no plan to track my car (completely stock 2011 WRX with a OEM short throw shifter). But I was fascinated by how these drivers could change gears so quickly.