Crosswords1 min ago
Why aren't there more automatics in Britain?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.- they didnt have the speed that a manual can provide.
the latter is maybe the more important.. fine for Americans who generally buy larger cars that are pretty slow anyway, but Britons tend to drive smaller or more sportier cars where this became an issue in earlier automatic models. Look at RangeRovers in Britian for example... a lot of them are automatic (as with other larger cars).
I believe Britian buys more soft-tops than any other European country, all for that one sunny day a year.
The problem I always found with automatics related only to vehicles with low-powered engines. If you drive a car like a 3.8 litre automatic Range Rover, the gear changes are so smooth that you'll neither hear nor feel them. If you drive a 1.1 litre automatic Fiesta, you'll hear and (more importantly) feel every gear change - it's certainly not a smooth ride. So, if you want to drive an automatic, you'll really need a fairly large engine. (Ianess's 1.6 litre Astra is about the smallest-engined car I know that has fairly smooth gear changes. Several 1.8 litre and even 2.0 litre cars don't seem able to cope).
Larger engines mean greater fuel consumption (and, for the same size of engine, automatics use more fuel). US citizens have recently been protesting at the prospect of fuel prices rising above $3 per gallon. Here in the UK we pay prices in a range roughly equivalent to $7.20 to $8 per gallon. Perhaps this explains why our transatlantic cousins are happy to drive automatics while we prefer to look after our bank balances?
Chris
(PS: That 3.8 litre automatic Range Rover is the only car I've ever driven where you can see the fuel gauge visibly dropping as you drive along!).
Did they ever do a Range Rover 3.8litre? (I know of 2.5, 3.0, 3.5, 3.9, 4.0, 4.2, 4.4).
Anyway... I found automatics just too cumbersome for UK roads. The country roads have a lot of bends, a lot of hills, the auto box was always shifting and going down hill was a nightmare 'cos you were having to brake all the time, whereas in a manual you can use to box to slow you easier (some auto's don't have seperate auto gears).
For most people buying a brand new car, an auto is an unnecessary and expensive extra.
Chris
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