elh0102
Senior Member
I understand what you're saying, and to a great extent I agree. But, I also believe that there is a tuning issue that is not universally found in every ITS. I have read numerous detailed descriptions of how the revs will hang, and in some cases increase, the moment after the clutch and the throttle are disengaged in an upshift. That is pretty clear and specific, and would be very obvious to detect, probably even impossible to miss. I have tested my car under the conditions most often mentioned, as well as many more. My car does not do it, not at all. There is some turbo lag that is very noticeable under fast shifts, when immediately going back to full throttle. But this could hardly be mistaken for the rev hang being discussed, which I would find unacceptable.![]()
In all seriousness, I think this is a problem with perception. I get what you guys are saying. There is something about the way this car (and other Hondas...) behaves with the way the revs "hang around" erratically compared to other manual cars I've driven.
But I think that's where it ends. What I've done is just sort of accept it and adjust my driving appropriately. It was a bit of an eyebrow-raising event in the first few weeks- and the first few laps around a track- but I haven't noticed it virtually at all since.
I think I'm noticing a trend with people who got very used to BMWs appear to be particularly sensitive to this phenomenon.
From what I'm seeing it's a "retraining" thing... but I also understand how you can get very used to specific subjective nuances around an experience, and it feels like something is completely missing and can't be reconciled if you can't figure out how to replicate it. I wish I could tell you how I managed to get over it, because it makes me sad to think that people aren't getting the same level of enjoyment out of this car that I am.
But sometimes it really just boils down to "people like what they like".
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