I always thought an F1 car was about 30ms.
Is the Volkswagen/Audi gearbox quicker than that of an F1 car??

One seems to be Mitsubishi, who have announced a dual-clutch setup for the Evo X. The other one is rumored to be "european". Hmmm... BMW?Michigan-based powertrain products developer BorgWarner has signed up two new customers for its fuel-efficient DualTronic transmission technology.
So... multiplate wet clutch? 15% better than slushboxes, how does that compare to a manual with dry clutch?BorgWarner DualTronic is an industry-first wet-clutch and control-system technology for automated transmissions... fuel economy improvements of up to 15% over traditional automatics...
Tom, this is perfect way to explain the speed of this gearbox's, except point No 5 and7. As I understand there is no use of clutch during gear changes. Changes are so fast that there is no point to use clutch. Same apply to your point No7. Changes are so fast that there is no any use of adjusting or synchronizing revs. If you want to synchronize revs, then you in case of seamless shifting going to loose more time in synchronizing revs then to shift because of rotational masses in engine.Tom wrote:I was playing around with a stamp controller board at school (circuit board with LEDs, programmed through a PC) and I set the LEDs to flash once every 5 seconds for 30ms, literally a case of blink and you miss it, and then you think about what actually happens in that blink.
Along the lines of:
1, Driver presses paddle to change gear.
2, Signal is sent to on board computer
3, Signal sent through to rev gauge and speedo to see if the engine is at an acceptable speed to make that gear change.
4, Signal sent back to computer approving change.
5, Computer sends signal to clutch solonoid which activates removing power from the gearbox.
6, Computer sends signal to Gearbox solonoids which avctivate, punching out the previouse gear and the new one in.
7, Computer checks everything is in place and blips engine revs to syncronise.
8, Final check and clutch disengaged.
9, Repeat any times per lap.
10, Drive fast, win.
3KGT wrote:Does anyone have any diagrams that would help explain exactly how the seamless shifting takes place?