• @ByteJunk@lemmy.world
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    418 hours ago

    In my experience, releasing the clutch without adding throttle will only get you moving in a diesel car.

    Gasoline engines will stall much faster, which is part of the reason learning vehicles are all diesel.

    • @0ops@lemm.ee
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      210 hours ago

      I’ve never driven a car that couldn’t do this, and I’ve driven at least a dozen manual transmission cars and trucks, all gas. Hell my beater right now doesn’t have first gear, and I have no problems starting in second just idling. You just need to be really slow and attentive to your rpms. Not that you should always start rolling like this, but I agree with the comment above that it’s an excellent learning exercise. I always start with this one when I teach other people how to drive stick with great success, and I wish that I started with this exercise when I was learning.

    • @HelixDab2@lemm.ee
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      115 hours ago

      I’m guess that you don’t live in the US? Almost all cars in the US–whether training vehicles or not–are gasoline, and it’s mostly larger pickup trucks that are diesel. VW is one of the few companies that sells consumer cars that are diesel, and I’m not sure that they do anymore, not after there was that huge scandal about intentionally cheating EPA emissions standards with their diesel cars a decade back.