I'm too short... can't reach the pedals from the back seatTry it from the backseat!
I concur. The sight picture does not transfer from one side to the other and it takes some getting used to. I know I was flying "crooked" from the right seat for the few landings I tried. If I ever go for a CFI ticket, this will be a "fun" aspect to overcome.The more time you have flying only in the left seat makes the transition to right seat more difficult IMHO. My instrument training partner and I both started flying right seat early on working on the instrument rating. Take offs, approaches, landings from the right seat became second nature for both of us. By the time I hit 250 for the commercial, I probably had 50 hours flying right seat.
pedals?I'm too short... can't reach the pedals from the back seat
Rudder?pedals?
pedals?
The gas is on the right, the brake is on the left. Or at least that's what my CFI taught me.
Basic ground handling: brake for left, gas for right.
That CFI must drive an automatic. You never brake with your left foot, even in an automatic.
Nah, he must be an F1 racer. Clutch-pedal-less race cars' drivers brake with left foot
That CFI must drive an automatic. You never brake with your left foot, even in an automatic.
You son of a... look what you started.
Never say never on POA. You'll instantly get 10 people with "well actually..."
Nah, he must be an F1 racer. Clutch-pedal-less race cars' drivers brake with left foot
Still have clutch pedals, only the new Lambo Super Trofeo race cars and Ferrari Challenge cars don't have clutch pedals. Formula Cars, prototypes, and everything else still has a clutch.
F1 cars have the clutch on the steering wheel.
/endthreadjack
Not sure what you are trying to say here. I did say "clutch-PEDAL-less" cars not cars without a clutch. All cars have clutches, even slushbox automatics have clutches inside of them.
SMG/DSG cars all have computer control clutches with no driver input other than launch-control. If you are racing, you would go faster if you use left foot to brake(if you are trained that is). WRC, F1 do have clutches, but the driver only uses the pedal(WRC) or a button(F1) during a launch. F1 clutch can only handle about 4-5 hard launches. After that it's all computer controlled. You brake with left foot.
It's generally a bad idea on the road since you are likely to ride your brake and confuse people behind you with brake lights.
I'm still kind of confused. I see what you are saying. Paddles does mean no clutch pedal. But then you say: "All of the sequential cars even with paddles have physical clutch pedals." Which is not accurate even by your own statements. F1 does not have a pedal, but a button. And road DSG cars don't have third pedal. But I get your point of it not needing to not have a pedal for left foot braking.
As far as computer control vs throttle/off loading. Sure, I was referring to some road cars. In race car application you are correct.
Also, nice F50! I think it is
Well I'm nowhere near @Maceij but all the cars we had at work were electronic clutch and had no clutch pedal.
The most impressive was the 458 Italia with it's dual-clutch gearbox was smooth as butter. You almost couldn't feel the shifting...just hear it. Totally the opposite of the Lambo; that thing was obnoxious.
The dual clutch transmissions are absolutely outstanding. Although the comparison you make between Ferrari and Lamborghini isn't fair. The Lamborghini uses a single clutch setup which is quite different, with the dual clutch transmission it's one continuous pull without any pauses in power delivery.
My first time landing from the right seat was real fun when I remembered on touchdown that I had no brakes on the pedals. Handbrake wound up working out ok, but it took me a bit to remember to use it.