Belatti wrote:I do data acquisition for a guy that has two 80s F1 cars. Gear changes in upshift takes arround 0,2 secs. You can notice clearly the instant without acceleration in the GPS speed trace and also see the rpms steps.
I also have TC2000 touring car data with secuential 6 speed gearbox that uses powershift (ignition cut) and the time for a gearchange is reduced to half of that (barely more than 0,1 sec) and its difficult to see that with ONLY a GPS speedtrace.
I bet current F1 gearchenges occur in less than 0,05 secs...
Nowhere near enough data.
The manual gearshift is reliant on the drivers capabilities and the drivers modualation of the shift for any of a number of shift and car balance requirements.
The shift speed you quote 0.1 is almost certainly for the actual shift over lap which does not take into account any modulation of the engine torque output or clutch disengagement control pre or post overlap, as used in seamless 'sequential' operation, that reduces torque transfer.
The ignition cut you quote, on its own contitutes a complete break in torque transfer and therefore must be calculated into the shift speed efficiency result.
You only hear the upshift engage spike, not the modulations.
0.2 of a second for a manual shift over lap is VERY VERY slow. I can exceed this time with a standard baulk ringed gear shift using a racing change, without any need for ignition cut or clutch modulation and without any increase in engine rpm.
Simple. No increase in engine rpm means the shift must be at least as fast as any 'seamless' shift. The sequential is purely geometry not relevent to the shifts.
Your friends F1 cars must be severely limited by their slow gear shift speeds Belatti. I expect they are rarely used in anger however.
I would expect .03 to .05 for a modern F1 shift but this is ONLY the shift over lap and again does not 'time' the efficiency losses of the pre and post powertrain modulation needed to prevent a 'sledgehammer' shift that would damage the gearbox.
A missed shift by Button hurt his kneck off the start line this year and that was because shift modulation was not progammed correctly to soften and 'lengthen' the shift.
A manual dog slider assembly moves in a strait line, modern selector mechanics move in multi directions, the dog mechanism will ALWAYS be potentialy faster.
It is only this movement that is directly relevent to shift speed.