Mr. Lauber!!! the transmission that Crane guy has is not made to shift W/O a clutch. the gears are cut completely different. large trucks trannys have a double main shaft that allows for this kind of shifting along with a different cut gear. why take the chance and bust off a piece of a gear ,when you think you "GOT" it. I too have 3 million miles over the road,and I never goti nto the habit of no clutch. I beleive tha Crane guy needs an auto. transmission
the gears are cut completely different. large trucks trannys have a double main shaft that allows for this kind of shifting along with a different cut gear. why take the chance and bust off a piece of a gear
So, if I'm driving along, accelerating, in 3rd gear let's say, and lightly lift off of the throttle, slip the transmission out of gear and release the pressure on the shifter. Wait a half-of-a-second to let the transmission coast down, then, just before the right rpm/speed combination, put light pressure on the shifter to let it slip into 4th, while easing into the accelerator, so as not to shock the driveline.
If you only apply pressure for that short tenth of a second, the synchro is doing no more work than clutched shifting. It is probably doing less work. (less speed differential)
Just a thought.
I chose to use the clutch because the learning curve is a lot greater than the Freightliner I drove for a very short time. Even though the official policy had double clutching as a requirement, I was taught and drove it not using the clutch. But with my NV5600 and the G56 its a lot harder to get it in all gears with out grinding one or another gear not using the clutch. Seeing how these transmissions were designed to use the clutch, I just accepted the concept, and thats the way its been for me.![]()