Tuesday, 12 August 2014

Applications and popularity

Conversely, manual transmissions are no longer popular in plenty of classes of cars sold in North America, Australia & some parts of Asia, although they stay dominant in Europe, Asia, Africa & Latin America.  all cars are available with an automatic transmission option, & relatives cars & massive trucks sold in the US are predominantly fitted with automatics, however in some cases if a buyer wishes he/she can have the automobile fitted with a manual transmission at the factory. In Europe most cars are sold with manual transmissions. Most luxury cars are only available with an automatic transmission. In most cases where both transmissions are available for a given automobile, automatics are an at cost option, but in some cases the reverse is true. Some cars, such as rental cars & taxis, are  universally equipped with automatic transmissions in countries such as the US, but the opposite is true in Europe.[16] As of 2008, 75.2% of vehicles made in Western Europe were equipped with manual transmission, versus 16.1% with automatic & 8.7% with other.[17]

Sports cars are also often equipped with manual transmissions because they offer more direct driver involvement & better performance, though this is changing as plenty of automakers move to faster dual-clutch transmissions, which are usually shifted with paddles located behind the steering wheel. For example, the 991 Porsche 911 GT3 makes use of Porsche's PDK. Off-road vehicles & trucks often feature manual transmissions because they permit direct gear choice & are often more rugged than their automatic counterparts.

When a driver takes the licensing road check using an automatic transmission in some places, the resulting license is restricted to the use of automatic transmissions. This is the case in countries such as New Zealand (for the second-phase Restricted license, but not the final Full license), the European Union with the exception of member countries that opt to disallow road tests on automatic vehicles , China, Dominican Republic, Israel, Jordan, Norway, Philippines, Singapore, South Africa, South Korea, Sri Lanka, Switzerland, & the U.A.E. This treatment of the manual transmission skill seems to maintain the widespread use of the manual transmission. As plenty of new drivers worry that their restricted license will become an hindrance for them where most cars have manual transmissions, they make the work to learn with manual transmissions & procure full licenses. Some other countries (such as Turkey, Greece, Georgia, India, Pakistan, Portugal, Malaysia, Serbia, Brazil, Russia, Ukraine & Denmark) go even further, whereby the license is granted only when a check is passed on a manual transmission. In Denmark & Brazil drivers are allowed to take the check on an automatic in the event that they are handicapped, but with such a license they won't be allowed to drive a automobile with a manual transmission.

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