I remember when I had to do a drive sim at a mega carrier with the training booth things even though I already had my CDL. I asked the proctor if I could try it with the gear shifter to see how accurate it was to the real thing. He got pissy and said he didn't want his simulator damaged by someone that didn't know how to drive stick. I showed him my CDL with no auto restriction and he became infuriated. Said I'd never have a career if I pushed back on "my superiors" like that.
Anyways... Always wanted to try one of the driving sims to see how they compared to the real thing. You know, kinda like a sex doll.
Anecdote over.
How to learn manual transmission?
Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by mikkimat5412, Jun 24, 2025.
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Sons Hero and FullMetalJacket Thank this.
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Experienced drivers were floating [those 5 speeds are easy] with the liquid movement by the end of the first day.
On the other hand it would take me a while to stop crunching a road-ranger after so much time in that Mack. -
A little surprised nobody seems to explain how to drive a manual. I’ll give it a try. You need to know most truck transmissions have 400 RPMs step between gear. First gear has enough torque to twist drive line or break other parts if you shift high RPMs and don’t match the gears. You avoid that by shifting at 1,000 RPMs in low range. You don’t need 500HP to get truck moving. You hold foot on brakes and let cutout at ideal. Until the truck pulls. Then take foot off the brakes give it a very little power . Bring RPMs to 1,000 and shift to send gear. Keep going thru the gears in low range and shift at 1,000 RPMs because you won’t have to worry about matching the gears and your double clutching doesn’t have to be good. You also won’t get truck cab rocking. You will shift very smoothly and look like a professional. If at stop light you will go thru the first 5 gear just getting rolling thru the stop light or stop sign.
After you get moving and flip the step high range. Now you need that power ! Step on the pedal and bring RPMs up to 1600 RPMs then shift. Let RPMs drop to 1200 RPMs so don’t t shift to fast or gears will grind. At 1200 RPMs it will go into gear because remember the 400 RPMs steps between gears ? 1600-400 is 1200 RPMs. Once in gear at 1200 rpm step on the pedal bring it up to 1600 rpm keep as shifting Ang going faster. If you miss the gear at 1200 rpms you get another chance. let engine drop to 800 rpms it should go into gear 1200 rpms-400rpms is 800 rpms.. This is kinda old info now because the new engines pull at 1,000 rpm but back when we had pre emission ent like S60 or N14 or Cat those had most torque at 1,200 rpms. So you could adore RPM range for the high gears to 1,000 and 1400 rpms if you wanted. I was trained at 1200 and 1600 it pretty easy to see on dash. Don’t push clutch to the floor otherwise you will activate the clutch brake and you only need that when stopped. -
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tscottme Thanks this.
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My Father taught me to drive a non-synchronous transmission. ANY torque on either the driveshaft coming from the rear end or the engine makes it hard to impossible to move the gears. To master these transmissions, you have to fully understand the engine RPMs and the speeds relative to what gear you are in. My father told me once about a driver coming down cabbage who was not paying attention and missed a gear. The driver was unable to get into any gear and almost did not make that last westbound turn.
This is why I tell green drivers not to be listening to music etc, when in places where you are going to be shifting gears. Perfectly OK if the middle of nowhere at highway speed. In some ways, driving a non-synchronous transmission is like directing an orchestra.
If I can do it, I am 100% positive most of the people today can. It's just important to remember the basics. If you don't, you can tear up a transmission or a drive train VERY easily.tscottme Thanks this. -
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Either way, the more things you physically do the easier it is to learn new things. These days people have almost zero physical experience, other than eating and holding a phone, and so many more things than before are called more difficult than I would have imagined. We did have a few people with more trouble than most students but there weren't any automatics so everyone had to learn. -
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