The Province

The stick shift just feels better to me

Manual-transmissi­on vehicles are a dying breed, however — and that’s a shame

- LORRAINE SOMMERFELD

Ifound the easiest way to become a one-percenter. I bought a car with a manual transmissi­on.

“#SaveTheMan­uals” is a popular hashtag on social media, as it usurps saving the children, the whales and the planet, it seems. The fact is, a few loud voices are doing the yelling, and most of them are people like my colleagues.

We like driving; we like manuals. Yes, we know manuals no longer get better fuel economy, and we know that electronic wizardry has dampened the edges of the experience. We don’t care.

For a dying number of people, your right hand isn’t for holding a coffee or a cellphone — it’s for shifting.

My 2020 Hyundai Elantra GT N Line is a hoot.

Manufactur­ers follow the money, though. Consider the rather sobering news from a J.D. Power study late last year that in the U.S., electric vehicles had surpassed — and nearly doubled — the sales of manuals. Didn’t see that coming.

Sure, it’s a one per cent versus two per cent discussion, but still. While Canadians are a little more likely to opt for a stick, our offerings are based on what the American market decides, and it’s overwhelmi­ngly deciding we can take our cry for a manual, and shift it.

It’s not that manual transmissi­ons got worse (though some would argue even that). It’s that automatic transmissi­ons got better — much, much better. They beat up every argument for keeping the manuals around.

Fuel consumptio­n? An automatic can slip through more gears faster to get the best. Price? Buying a manual once meant a significan­t saving on the price tag. Rarely is that the case anymore, and when it is, it’s in the hundreds, not the thousands. No, in a classic debate, all I really have is this: I like it better.

The ongoing demise of the manual transmissi­on is more noticeable in some places than others. Genesis discontinu­ing the option on its G70 for 2022 didn’t strike my radar as particular­ly sad, but the Jaguar F-Type? That car was born to be a manual, even if it wasn’t born as one. And no, paddle-shifting isn’t a compromise, it’s a consolatio­n prize. Three pedals or bust.

I taught both of my sons, wishing to instil the glorious feel of engaging with a vehicle instead of just mastering the point-and-shoot vanilla of an automatic. Both worked at car dealership­s in their teens, and both could move cars most of their workmates couldn’t.

As much as they complained and became exasperate­d while learning — remember stalling in traffic, or on a hill, or (gasp!) in front of a girl? — both became proficient, and more importantl­y, I could get back to buying manual cars.

I encourage parents of new drivers to teach them on a manual. There are too many distractio­ns in today’s cars. For a new driver, winnowing down what they must concentrat­e on begins in connection with the engine, finding gears, anticipati­ng changes in speed, and overcoming the hiccups.

The upsides are many. If you rent a car in most European and Asian countries, it’s likely to have a stick shift. It’s a drag to land after a long flight in a strange place and find a car with three pedals you don’t know how to work.

If you ever plan on owning a motorcycle, for off-road or on-road use, it’s likely to have a clutch. Although even that arena is offering more automatics every year.

And if you think the #SaveTheMan­uals crowd is passionate, talk to motorcycli­sts.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? Lorraine Sommerfeld mourns the passing of so many manual transmissi­ons. ‘We like driving; we like manuals,’ she says.
GETTY IMAGES FILES Lorraine Sommerfeld mourns the passing of so many manual transmissi­ons. ‘We like driving; we like manuals,’ she says.
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