THubbard,
"I wouldn't do this all the time but it will give you a good idea on what the trans. wants to see in regards to rpm's to shift. "
I talked to a lot of truck drivers over the years and a few that owned their own trucks and they all said to not use a clutch when shifting. I drove a Mack DM 800 and it had an 18 speed quadraplex trans. that if you used the clutch you could never shift quick enough to keep it moving. (2 shifters) In fact it would not even go into the next gear. This truck had alot of use and never had a problem with the trans. I agree, that our trucks should not be shifted like this all the time due to it wearing on the syncro's. The above post is so that a person can understand the correct rpm's that the vehicle needs to shift. Otherwise you are still being hard on the syncro's because they still have to sync the gears to the engine/driveline speed. When you down shift a standard trans you speed up the gears to match the driveline. The wear surface on the synco is doing this work. So the best way for the trans to down shift is to match the gears as close as possible to prevent wear. To do this you push the clutch in and then put the trans in neutral and then let the clutch out and rev the engine to the proper rpm's and then push the clutch in and down shift. This is to much work and there is a lot of other things that could wear out due to reving the engine etc.
Jon
"I wouldn't do this all the time but it will give you a good idea on what the trans. wants to see in regards to rpm's to shift. "
I talked to a lot of truck drivers over the years and a few that owned their own trucks and they all said to not use a clutch when shifting. I drove a Mack DM 800 and it had an 18 speed quadraplex trans. that if you used the clutch you could never shift quick enough to keep it moving. (2 shifters) In fact it would not even go into the next gear. This truck had alot of use and never had a problem with the trans. I agree, that our trucks should not be shifted like this all the time due to it wearing on the syncro's. The above post is so that a person can understand the correct rpm's that the vehicle needs to shift. Otherwise you are still being hard on the syncro's because they still have to sync the gears to the engine/driveline speed. When you down shift a standard trans you speed up the gears to match the driveline. The wear surface on the synco is doing this work. So the best way for the trans to down shift is to match the gears as close as possible to prevent wear. To do this you push the clutch in and then put the trans in neutral and then let the clutch out and rev the engine to the proper rpm's and then push the clutch in and down shift. This is to much work and there is a lot of other things that could wear out due to reving the engine etc.
Jon