Heel Toe & Rev Matched Shifts | Learn It!
Vložit
- čas přidán 19. 06. 2024
- You might think driving a car is simple. In this series, we provide DIY lessons on how to drive cars and trucks. In this video, we cover downshift and rev-match downshift. With the GM strike news, take some time to improve yourself. In our the following videos we will provide lessons on how to operate cars and trucks. The techniques can help drivers of all ages to gain a greater appreciation of driving. Many of these self-help videos can teach safety and excitement. We use an Ariel Atom 3S made by TMI. However, whether you own a BMW, Honda Accord, Veloster, Miata, Subaru or Ferrari these tips and tricks will work.
Driver Training Video:
• Are Race Schools Worth...
#cars #help #driving - Auta a dopravní prostředky
Drivers don't be discouraged, this takes a ton of practice!
And it feels so good when you get it right.
The problem is trying not to wreck your clutch and transmission while learning to do it properly. It feels like you are going to destroy your car with the amount practice it takes to get it right.
It’s impossible
@@willmalliotis1904 Not at all.
@@engineer1able that's why we have simulator
Rev-matching is the easy part. Its maintaining smooth braking while rev-matching that's hard, at least for me...
amen!
Absolutely! I always seem to get on the brakes a little too hard.
Yeah bro, but man when u get it its so freaking worth it.
That's why I can easily do it in a simulator but not in real life. Reason being that in simulator there is no feel of inconsistent deceleration
Don't beat yourself up about it...Over assisted modern brakes don't help. I struggle in my wife's Audi A3 but find my Cayman brake pedal feel like night and day and heel/toe is ten times easier.
One of the hardest things about heel-toe (at least on the street) is keeping consistent brake pressure. When cruising up to a stop on the street you are usually not too deep into the brake, so when you go to swivel your foot over to blip the throttle it can be hard not to jab the brake at first. So for me when first learning (out on some back roads) was to get deeper into the brakes when blipping the throttle, as it makes it easier to keep a more consistent pressure on the brake. It also made it easier to actually hit the throttle with the side of my foot when deeper into the brakes.
I also got into the habit when I was at a stop light was to just sit their practicing my throttle blips (like Mr. Goose showed at the beginning of the video). Just maybe don't do that if you are behind people as they may think you are a bit of an asshole revving your engine lol.
After about a month of actively practicing it starts to become instinct to heel-toe. That said, even after years of doing it I still don't nail it every time. The fact I can still improve after 15+ years of driving manual is what makes all this stuff so rewarding (even in my slow ass Mazda3).
Even harder to not keep brake pressure consistent but vary it at will during the process. ... That's where the fun really starts. 🙂 It is fun to git gud, and that's why I also heel&toe into 1st.
Same. I've been utilizing heel-toe for around 15 years, and EVERY drive I feel like I'm slightly improving.
You said that perfectly. That's my problem. I can't do it when going slowly because these big brakes stop so abruptly. I can't even get my foot over to the throttle.
So I try when going faster, but the opportunities are brief, and I screw it up. Goofy foot placement or something.
So , as it's explained in the video, I need to get to an open area. A safe place, specifically to practice.
Thank you!
Recently taught myself. Here are my tips to add: consistent brake pressure is the hardest part. Practicing this while parked isn’t enough feedback on the brake pressure IMO. When coming to stops on the road I would put it in neutral and practice the footwork without actually shifting gears while I decelerate. Really helped get the feel down. For actual shifts, practicing at freeway speeds was the best for me. Top gear down to the next is the most forgiving. Brake pressure more forgiving when faster also. Get an idea of your gear ratios. 3rd to 2nd is a bigger change so takes much more throttle than 6 to 5 in my car. Another tip that helped me: we tend to be too slow and cautious letting the clutch pedal out. Get used to being more aggressive with the left foot. I also improved greatly when I didn’t try to do it all at once like people already good at it do . I started being very deliberate and focusing one step at a time. Helped a ton. Clutch in while braking, Rotate foot , carefully press throttle with heel while focusing on constant brake pressure , then shift the gear, then clutch out. I would be so deliberate that sometimes I would have to blip it twice because the revs fell too far while shifting. That’s fine. This deliberate practice helped with feel till I got faster and faster. Then tried taking a few corners aggressively to force myself to do it faster. Worked. This is the best vid I’ve seen on the topic by far. If you ever downshift to 1st make sure to double clutch I know my car doesn’t have a synchro to 1st. Some cars have aftermarket pedal adapters to change position to facilitate heel toe. Helped immensely in my car.
Yes, initially I'd actually say the sequence out loud to force me to focus : 1) Brake, 2) Clutch, 3) Blip, 4) Gear, 5) Clutch. The four foot moves are essentially...right...left...right...left...
This is fantastic, thank you!
What I found helpful and also what I teach people who want to learn how to heel-toe is to first practice braking with your heel off the floor of the car. It really changes the braking process and feel without the leverage of your heel on the floor. After that it's easier to incorporate the rotation of the foot onto the throttle. Hopefully some people find this helpful.
Oooh, gotta try this
this is a great tip. i tried it the other day and it helped a lot.
One other thing that isn't mentioned much that helped me, is to condition yourself to being used to braking with your foot in the air. I was so used to braking with my heel firmly planted in the floorboard, but braking with your heel in the air might take some getting used to, in order to get the brake pressure you thought you wanted. This will help later when you need to blip the throttle.
damn this atom sounds sick
Yea, the turbo whooshing and exhaust are intoxicating.
@@danielmembrillo6472 Fo sho!
Omg yes! 😆
@@danielmembrillo6472 doesn’t the Ariel atom use a supercharged k20?
@@guenthersteiner8163 Depends on the kind of Atom. He did a video on this very one, which is his (the 3S)
I watched the entire video. I also drive a Prius.
well... now that only thing to do is either A: Get a cheap miata to play with, B: hellcat/LS swap your Prius and use a 6speed.
Definitely with Hunter on this. Manual swap that prius.
* my girlfriend’s Prius. Me I have a 944t. Whee, every few days.
I have a prius C. I feel a bycicle can overtake me but you can't beat 60 mpg
Yes time for a Miata, or a Corvette.
No point adding my experience, I think Mark covered most of it... All I can add is that when you nail that first ever perfectly smooth heel and toe... Man you're hooked for life ..
Thanks. Going to practice on my fabulous CVT.
Savage Geese went thorough for the most part. I would like to add this too. In order to catch the revs on time, sequence it like this. First put in gear then blip and let go of the clutch. Blip should happen right before clutch is released. I made a mistake of bliping and pulling the stick at the same time when I started practicing. Most of the time it was jerky and I got successful every now and then. Then I started experimenting and found the sequence I mentioned to be way more accurate and consistent. When you get really used to it it will look from the eyes of anyone one other than the driver that everything happens at the same time. That is why many footcam videos gives the wrong impression of doing all at once and actually tends to create that intimidation. Throttle response and gear throws also plays an important role in determining how fast you can downshift.
THANKYOU. I think I fell for this. Now I'm gonna grab my car.
Heal and toe done well and consistently actually reduces overall wear and tear.
Indeed, not to mention balance, neither of which he mentions in the vid. There's certainly more to heel toe than just being engaging!
Wear and tear of what
I think just even doing it consistently makes a big difference (doing it well should come with time). I learned to drive stick on a 2004 WRX and the car was still on the stock clutch (and transmission) when I sold it 12 years later with 200K miles on the clock.
So does never going wot. Saves a ton of piston ring wear.
@@tobagoak3014 your entire drivetrain, clutch, trans, diffs, axles, driveshaft shift forks, synchros, etc.
I'd say he explained it pretty well. Something I would've touched on, and will be particularly helpful to a younger audience (pre-legal driving age), is using certain games/simulators. For the most part I learned the concept and rhythm of heel-toe downshifting while playing "Live for Speed" with some Logitech G25 pedals almost twenty years ago. The foot rhythm is way overwhelming at first but with time and practice, it becomes second nature. Then when I got my license and a real car and started trying it, it was again very overwhelming at first because obviously the feeling, weight, speed, shoes, car etc are all specific but I was able to get it down much quicker since I already had the general muscle memory.
I'll also say I find it much easier to do in race driving conditions: You usually don't brake nearly as hard on the street, even during spirited driving, compared to an event on a race track, and when you brake harder, it brings the pedal lower which then makes it easier to reach the throttle pedal. I actually modified the throttle pedal on my one Mustang to raise it higher i.e. more in-line with the brake pedal.
One last part I might've mentioned was how fast you let out the clutch. If you nail the rev match perfectly (not often), you should be able to let the clutch out immediately, but if you are even off by a couple hundred RPM, you still want to feather the clutch out a little. The closer you are to the correct RPM match, the faster you can let it out. What you'll see people do, and I still do when learning a car or just in the heat of hard driving, is rev out and get the RPM a bit off, but still let the clutch out without feathering, it'll lock up the rear wheels (assuming it's RWD) for a moment and can cause a spin on entry.
As he said, all sounds crazy complex but it becomes second nature and you don't really think about it during the act. Left foot braking still feels completely weird and unnatural, but I recently started doing it in racing sims on sequential gearbox race cars and started getting more comfortable with it. Still wouldn't do it in a real car lol Even just taping the brake pedal mid-corner or down a straight to set the pads feels so wrong.
lfs is amazing
Another thing besides revving just the right amount is the timing and release speed of the clutch pedal. Getting that right is just a important.
yeah right- if you under rev it and go a little slow on release you still get away with it. i mean it's not that cool then but if you figured out how man revs a blip gives you you can start there to get close to a perfect one :D
Great video. If more people learn how to drive maybe the manual won’t completely disappear.
Excellent video! My only tip is that it will probably be easier to learn, and more noticeable when you do it wrong, if you learn in a car with a cable operated throttle.
I pretty much revmatch downshift and heel toe all the time during daily driving. The exception is when I am feeling lazy or tired, or I don't want to confuse a passenger.
It makes driving more fun and engaging, and it feels really rewarding when you nail it. Only way to become proficient is practice! That Atom looks like a total blast.
Really good overview. One comment I have for beginners is to remember that the harder you are braking the farther down the brake pedal will be (obviously). So if you practice to get throttle positions right under relatively light braking, you may find yourself bouncing off the rev limiter the first time you try to throw the car into a corner and really get on the brakes.
That looks like so much fun! Being in control of the machine and extracting the most out of it. Nice!
Thank you guys so much for this video!!
Really looking forward to the rest of this series!!
why is this not the first video to come up when I search heel toe!!! This is exactly what everyone needs
This is the best instruction I have seen on this topic, well done!
Great video, savagegeese! Thank you for doing this one. Also, props to using an Ariel Atom as the instructional tool. So awesome!
This is one of the most satisfying skills you can learn as a driver. Er, used to be able to learn…when cars had manual transmissions.
As usual, the best automotive content on youtube. Keep on keeping on.
Lol I actually learned how to rev match from watching SG's Type RA video. Life changer thanks!
I started practicing H&T while I was still taking my driving lessons. Not to mention, my learning process featured a couple of scary jerky braking ! Thank you for sharing with all enthusiast drivers.
Brilliant class, thank you.
Thanks Man! This simplifies it so much! If you can and if your health allows it....more please.
Awesome insight savagegeese. We appreciate the content
This is a really good primer and a contribution to the car community. Thank you.
Thank you SG! This is EXACTLY what I needed - I have got the rev matching throttle blips down but needed a way to practice the heel-toe braking - Thank you!
Thank you Mr. Goose, this is by far the best video on this topic that I have ever watched. I'm looking forward to rewatching this and practicing in my own car. I'll never be able to match the way Senna drives in the NSX video, but I would like to get comfortable in doing this.
Thanks for the video! I've been waiting for something like this - every video out on youtube leaves a lot of things out and fails to explain a lot (they just show you how it's done) and i personally think understanding something is a crucial part to learning it.
Awesome that the atom really let's me see how you utilize these techniques. Other videos of a cell phone jammed in between someone's legs to show the technique is difficult to understand. Thanks savage for the good video!
More of this! Been practicing these maneuvers off and on, on my daily commute for a few months now. It definitely takes time to get good at it. This video makes it a lot clearer on what to actually do, for a newbie. Thanks fellas!
Excellent video!!
Perfect timing for this video. I so need this.
This video is amazing, thanks for the exercises!
Your suggestion about trying different shoe sizes is so true. I some cars I wish I could move the pedal box about 4 inches to the left.
Much love from Cebu, Philippines! Thanks for this video Mr Geese. Its the simplest to understand out of all heel toe videos out there.
Best video I have seen on learning heel/toe. I’ve owned my Miata for two years and have just recently found the most comfortable and consistent foot position on the pedals.
Thanks, appreciate this how-to... best one I came across. Be safe!
I really like the step by step approach (get used to throttle blip first, then rev match, etc.), really helps break it down. definitely going to practice it. thanks!
I know I’m very late, but I thought it might help someone who’s learning this to mention that your upper gears are always closer together than lower gears are. So it could help you to start trying this downshifting from say 4th gear to 3rd gear. That way if you mess it up it won’t be this huge buck from 3rd to 2nd. Also a lot of the time this happens around the mid rev range when you’re driving on the street, where the engine isn’t as responsive as up top. Something I had to learn was that when you’re at lower revs it can often take more throttle than you think to get a smooth downshift, but that depends entirely on the car and the spacing of the gears. Also I think (away from other drivers) it can help in the initial stages to drive along at maybe 30-40 miles an hour and then brake and put the car in neutral, and just blip the throttle a few times as if you were downshifting. When you do that, you’ll quickly notice if you’re applying even brake pressure or not, and it can help you figure out the best way for you to do it while keeping the brakes consistent. It’s called heel & toe but it can really be the left & right side of your foot or the edge of your shoe or whatever, the only goal is to find a way to use both the brake and throttle with one foot and everyone can do it slightly differently.
Best heel toe video out there .
Very good instruction, thanks for sharing. Time to go practice!
Excellent instruction ! Thank you for taking the time to produce quality, educational films. Great channel.
I learned this by reading a Bondurant BOOK 15 years ago. This is a great video!
The best tutorial on heel&toe!
This was super helpful, thanks for the tips and the words of encouragement!
This video may be the push I need to find somewhere quiet to practice this. I can rev-match pretty nearly perfect in my car without the brakes. This is definitely what I'm going to learn next. Thanks Mark.
I like the analogy to playing a musical instrument. It's all about timing and rhythm. Super helpful, thanks.
Putting the savage in the savagegeese, that is some impressive driving man! I tried the whole process in traffic surrounded by other drivers a few times and it felt extremely dangerous so I gave up. Now I am re-inspired to try the steps and work it up!
This is the best rev matching/heel and toe explanation/teaching video by far
Thank you. I understand the concept but was struggling to not under rev or over rev. I will utilize your suggestions.
Thank you.
The best explanation and training on this technique that I've found. Thanks
Thanks Savagegeese for taking your time to teach us. I definitely gonna learn stick.
extremely helpful video, thank you!
Excellent, exactly what I was looking for
Im speculating a video on “left foot brake” in turns
Thanks for ur awesome video
I'm very glad that my driving instructor taught me this; then told me to practice AFTER I passed my test. Done it in every fast, slow, good and bad car I've ever owned. Habit now.
Best video on this topic
Great info and tips. Thanks!
Awesome step by step instructions. I've been rev matching on my downshifts my whole life. Just timing and leaving space in front of me for braking. I've learned to have a fast foot. But, I need to master this heel-toe method now, so I don't have to interrupt consistent braking.
A new challenge!
Thanks for a great explanation.
The timing of this video couldn't be more perfect for me. I've been driving stick for about a year, and I've recently gotten much more comfortable rev matching downshifts, so now this is my next thing to work on.
Thanks for the breakdown and visualisation, got me motivated to improve my technique. Even though I do this every day if I put to it I could be much faster and smoother. Sometimes it is just frustrating though, cause the electronics do what they want, depending on air temp, fuel mix, engine heat, turbo does its own thing...I am sure it is all very advanced and I am not hating on modern cars but you push the gas down and sometimes nothing happens for a while and then other times it hangs on the gas. Brakes are usally very sensitive too so it is hard for me to be consistent.
Mark, you're so handsome with your performance driving tutorials. Clearly you like performance driving and gathering all the knowledge you can on it. Only you can be the one to make good videos on it for other people.
I'd strongly consider this type of video as an additive to your channel alongside your usual formula. Not just the fine-print series, but a tutorial series.
You're in an awesome car and I know how "tryhard" you are with driving, so I'm gonna listen to you. I'm gonna listen to you *hard*
Keep it up.
Great video, thanks! I’m looking forward to the next one!
Great video! I'm glad somebody is out there teaching people how to drive. I think most people can't even drive their cars properly.... That's what causes a lot of accidents..
Great outline! For me, the operative term is "muscle memory" It took a ton of time & practice to become competent. Nothing to add, this is the best overview I've seen.
GREAR video, thank you..
I love you Theodore. You're the best.
Cool soundtrack at the start. Makes me hyped for a series.
Great video.. learned this on 79 MGB, a blast from my uncle (who raced V). No HP but good technique. Miss this in modern family vehicles.
im learning this ahead of time, i just bought a racing sim with little knowledge of manual driving technique. This was really helpful.
That diagram was incredibly helpful! thank you
I heel toe and rev match all the time, its instinct now lol. I do it even when I'm just driving normal.
I wanna be like that
@@bautistavazquez6295 when I drive my gf's jeep or her sons golf tsi I keep reaching for the shifter when I come up to a stop light. I'm so used to heel toe and downshifting when slowing down that I actually come in too fast at a light, because I dont have the engine helping to slow me down on an automatic transmission. Plus, I live in northern Indiana so it helps to rev match/heel toe in the winter to help slow a slide and still be able to steer the car. It is super easy on my cobalt ss/sc. I literally only use my big toe to hit the brakes while I blip the throttle to clutch out to the next gear down.
Thank you!!
God I can't wait to have a stick shift again. I could only ever pull off heel toes off in my E21 BMW. Never got them down in my miata and stopped trying in my WRX. Next car will be the start again.
Love these new driving videos man. I hope the viewership picks up to match your effort!
Youre a hero
Excellent demonstration of footwork that I couldn't really see in other rev-matching videos. This was hard for me in the beginning because of not having learned it before (well, i didn't even know what rev-matching was!), but like the instructor said, I practice it while driving in back roads in my town, driving my right hand-drive, 5-speed Maruti Swift (it's actually Suzuki). I have a long way to go but this is really fun and I hope this time around the clutch lasts longer. :) Dhanyawaad for that great driving lesson!
I very much enjoy your channel! Thanks....
It does feel and sound great when you get it right.
And it saves your clutch and gearbox 👍🏻
Great video as usual, covers it all. If you wanna learn just start practicing.
I learned to heel and toe in my old Fiat Uno (1990). It was very hard the pedals were miles apart, no RPM gauge so all done by ear. It took me about a a couple of months to get okay on the road but another 5 years to get very good at it. Almost all other cars are so easy to rev match now. Also, most normal people will think you a bit weird when you heel and toe in your daily ;)
It is worth learning this skill as on track and skidpan etc. I am very comfortable changing gears very smoothly I don't have to think about it at all...
Rev matching... Master that a long time ago. Heel toe... My feet are too big and I suck ass at it.
Great video!
Great content. Thanks for sharing.
Thanks for the video SG. Very useful topic for me since I can’t seem to do heel-toe without slamming in the brakes with my toes
I drove stick for many years and never even knew about this until recently. I took a break from manual cars back into automatic cars for 8 years, now going back watching reviews on cars i was interested in to respike that car hobby, i kept seeing everyone mention its good or bad for heel toe xyz car. I couldnt figure out what the hell it even was.. but now going back to purchasing a stick car soon and seeing this mentioned im definitely gunna have to give this some practice when i purchase soon. This is a super helpful video and makes alot of sense seeing visuals, and all the comments, thanks!
I've been driving a manual transmission for 30 years and I don't think I've really tried to heel toe all that much or at least never put in the practice. Thanks for the tips on working up through the process.
Dude its gonna change your life...
Wow just wow man
Great info. As a Hpde instructor don’t expect this trading at a weekend event. Do as he advises, do it everyday around town until it is a instinct before trying it at 150 with an instructor who quits for the weekend. Great video
I do it unconsciously every time I'm driving manual. It helps smooth the downshifts while braking before corner entry so the car doesnt jerk, possibly making one lose control.
Practice, practice, practice.
The higher the speed, the higher the rev match required.
Excellent tutorial.
I can rev match near perfectly, but for heel toe I can never get my foot position comfortable
It's the same for me. Some cars it's either the wheel is rubbing my leg as I pivot or the brake to gas layout is bad.
Size 12 feet here 😂 Last time I attempted heel-toe I nearly crashed my car.
It takes practice, you have to keep trying. Took me a full month to get it right half-way and as then it became 2nd nature
Some cars are more comfortable than others. I know in my Civic I needed to buy a throttle spacer to make it comfortable to do (vs not possible for me to do before).
For some cars it is easier than other for sure and shoe dependant. one thing that I found is that in my mazda3 it is easier for me to heel-toe with the top-right of my foot blipping the throttle and the bottom left holding brake pressure. In my Miata (NA) I use a similar technique to S.G.
I rev match downshift on commuting trying to stay off brakes. Rev matching w brakes when traffic permits. Tailgaters, and no rev matching, due to slowing without brake light. Great video Mr Goose. It is like rolling a kayak. Muscle Memory.
Good vid. Thanks
I naturally learned how to heal toe downshift myself. As with driving a standard transmission vehicle, you can watch all the tutorial videos available online but it really comes down to driving one yourself daily, and learning comfortability and muscle memory. The best way to describe it is it comes to you naturally. It becomes a second nature to you kinda like riding a bicycle, or learning how to drive a manual in general. The more you drive one - the more natural it becomes and the more fluid you become handling it. I literally learned heel toe by feeling. I hadn't even heard what it meant back when I had my first manual car, I just realized it was way easier to blip the throttle going around a corner to accelerate out then it was to just rev match downshift normally. So just go out and drive. Buy manual cars when they're available! Pretty soon lazy drivers are gonna completely make manuals go the way of the Dodo.
Takes some time to get it right but well worth the time invested. Don't get discouraged it can be difficult starting out. Another thing to keep in mind is adjusting or changing your pedal pox. Cars have different spacing from brake to gas. Starting out with pedals that are closer together I find easier.
Mark, great video with a solid progression for learning this skill. Only suggestion I have would be to include some slo-mo shots of your foot action.
A crucial skill that every car enthusiast should learn Awesome relevant video