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  #1  
Old 11-20-2005, 12:45 PM
maxthunder maxthunder is offline
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Question manual/auto bikes?

Is there a big difference between a manual trans bike and an automatic? I'm looking in to biking and I'm curious if a manual is going to be as much of a hassle on a bike as it is on a car. Lemme know!

max
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Old 11-20-2005, 05:49 PM
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Re: manual/auto bikes?

i didn't know you could get a bike automatic. seems like a waste of a performance vehicle to me. if you can't learn to drive a stick-shift, i can't imagine you being able to ride a motorcycle.
in a car you're told not to ride the clutch but on a bike you have more leeway since it's a wet clutch and is meant to be ridden to a degree.
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Old 11-20-2005, 08:30 PM
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Re: manual/auto bikes?

What's a wet clutch?
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Old 11-20-2005, 09:48 PM
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Re: manual/auto bikes?

Here's a lil read-up on Clutches (in general) http://auto.howstuffworks.com/clutch.htm

I think it does a GREAT job explaining what a clutch is/does and how it works.

As for auto bikes... there are VERY few automatic bikes... the few that exist are OLD or are on scooters rather than motorcycles. Take a course and learn how to use the clutch... otherwise, motorcycles may not be a good choice of transportation for you.
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Old 11-21-2005, 12:08 AM
gsf1200m gsf1200m is offline
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The new FJR1300 has a push button shifter and no clutch.
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Old 11-21-2005, 12:20 PM
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Who would want a bike that isn't a manual? Thats a big part of the bike that makes them fun. I love rowing through the gears. I actually find it easier to use the clutch on a bike than in a car. This is mostly due to the fact that you may be doing other things in an automobile in which you may find using the clutch more of a chore than a pleasure. On a bike you really can't be doing anything else other than riding it so using the clutch is almost an automatic act in my mind.
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Old 11-21-2005, 02:04 PM
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I agree with everybody about having a standard motorcycle is much better. In the case of hte FJR, my father likes not having a clutch because after riding for 35 years and being older, it is starting to hurt his hand. Plus its not fully auto, you still tell it when to shift.
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Old 11-21-2005, 09:54 PM
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Re: manual/auto bikes?

Quote:
Originally Posted by maxthunder
Is there a big difference between a manual trans bike and an automatic? I'm looking in to biking and I'm curious if a manual is going to be as much of a hassle on a bike as it is on a car. Lemme know!

max
I learned to ride a manual transmission bike at 10 years old, and it was easy, much easier to use than a car.

In fact, when I learned to drive a manual trans car, I has appaled at how clumsy, difficult and imprecise it was, compared to a bike.

IMO for this reason, there are almost no auto trans bikes made; it simply is not necessary because the manual transmission on a bike is so easy to use.
As far as I know, has only been two recent auto transmission bikes that I know of. Honda make an auto transmission CB 400 and CB 750 back in the late 70's and early 80's.

http://www.cvmg-gpr.ca/hondamatic/

http://www.vintagebike.co.uk/Bike%20...Hondamatic.htm

http://www.vintagebike.co.uk/Bike%20...Hondamatic.htm

There have been many Honda dual purpose lightweight little bikes with automatic clutches and manual transmissions that are easy to use.

These days, most of those are tiny bikes intended for kids; I am not sure if adult-size models are still sold in North America, but they are still popuar in overseas markets.

http://www.oldhonda.com/collect.htm

Other auto trans bikes:

http://www.ridleymotorcycle.com/Dynamic/main.htm
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Old 11-28-2005, 01:30 PM
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Re: manual/auto bikes?

I was just reading up on that FJR. It's pretty cool!

Unlike some other designs that used a centrifugal clutch or torque convertor, the bike does have a typical clutch design (but no clutch lever), it just uses a computer controlled actuator to operate it.

Clutch operation is as fast or faster than a good rider could work it, and on downshifts the ECM blips the throttle to match RPMs to the next gear range, and "floats" the shift without the clutch, like an Indy car.

There is a foot shifter on it, although it is just a switch, rather than a mechanical link to the gearbox. It still gives the rider the option to use that method rather than the up/down buttons on the handlebar if they want to.

There is no full-auto operation, you still have to do the shifting, unlike a car where it shifts at preset points and conditions.

Kinda suprised they didn't have that as a selectable feature, it'd be easy enough to do with the level of computer control on that bike...
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Old 11-28-2005, 01:32 PM
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Re: manual/auto bikes?

You know..I just put a little thought into it, and I think I know why they don't offer a full auto shift option.

Since shifts affect rear wheel traction, the first time someone went down on a wet curve because the bike self-shifted at a bad moment, they'd get sued into the stone age...
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Old 11-28-2005, 02:47 PM
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Re: manual/auto bikes?

Using the clutch isn't even necessary. The only time I clutch is when I have to come to a complete stop, or when I'm riding aggressively and am downshifting in preperation for a corner. When I commute, most of my downshifts are clutchless. It takes a bit more precision to do clutchless shifts, but it's not difficult at all when just cruising around. No matter how you choose to do it, it all becomes second nature fairly quickly. It becomes an art when you get into the realm of racing, however.
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Old 11-28-2005, 02:55 PM
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Re: manual/auto bikes?

Floating upshifts is very easy to learn, floating a downshift takes a little more practice.

As a semi driver, floating gears (no clutch) is second nature. I do use the clutch when I ride, but it is more of a quick, shallow grab to break torque on the driveline slightly than an all-out disengagement.

I find the consequences of blowing a floated shift on a bike too costly. They are only so forgiving before something chips or breaks, then you have a bike that pops outta gear under throttle or gets stuck in a certain gear...
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Old 11-28-2005, 10:35 PM
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Re: Re: manual/auto bikes?

Quote:
Originally Posted by jeffcoslacker
You know..I just put a little thought into it, and I think I know why they don't offer a full auto shift option.

Since shifts affect rear wheel traction, the first time someone went down on a wet curve because the bike self-shifted at a bad moment, they'd get sued into the stone age...

Good point never though of that. But another thought that the bike could have a sensor incorporated to know the lean angle and whether the bike should be shifter or not.
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Old 11-28-2005, 10:52 PM
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Re: Re: manual/auto bikes?

Quote:
Originally Posted by jeffcoslacker
Floating upshifts is very easy to learn, floating a downshift takes a little more practice.

As a semi driver, floating gears (no clutch) is second nature. I do use the clutch when I ride, but it is more of a quick, shallow grab to break torque on the driveline slightly than an all-out disengagement.

I find the consequences of blowing a floated shift on a bike too costly. They are only so forgiving before something chips or breaks, then you have a bike that pops outta gear under throttle or gets stuck in a certain gear...
On bikes, bent shift fork, doesn't that only happen when the shifting is careless? And I think it would be a slightly immune to smooth upshifts.

Just a question though, do you guys follow the traiditional method for clutch-shifting? As in close the throttle all the way to idle and then open it up again after shift and engaging the clutch? Or do you just keep holding the throttle, decrease it a little, pull in the clutch and shift and release?
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Old 11-29-2005, 09:09 AM
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Re: manual/auto bikes?

I just let the RPMs drop slightly and shift. Ideally, you should be matching your engine's RPM at the next gear for the road speed you are carrying, and it will drop in effortlessly (float). It's a little tricky at the speeds bike engines turn and how fast they wind up/down. That's why I give the clutch a quick grab to break the stress on the driveline slightly as I shift, so any discrepancy between RPM and road speed as the next gear meshes isn't a sudden hard shock directly to the gear.

It's real easy on a big truck, the cogs are so huge and the engine turns so slowly, you can actually feel the individual teeth going by as you push the shifter toward the next gear if they aren't exactly synched. With a redline of 2000 RPM and a useable range of just over 1000, it's pretty easy to feel your way through it without the clutch. After a while you get an ear for the correct sound for your speed, and it meshes like butter.

You can do it with a bike too, but it takes more practice and you have to be a lot more precise to get it to mesh smoothly. I do it by just listening to the motor as I let off the throttle, and imagining what it's gonna sound like when I hit the next gear and roll on the throttle (if I were using the clutch), and drop the shift when the motor sounds like it's right where it would pick up on the next gear...does that make any sense?
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