Good debate right here...
The firmness of the shifts are 100% controlled by how the car is driven, or what type of clutch you are running in a 5 speed.
So in part firmness requires the installation of a $300+ part and correct use by the operator?
Launch RPM is 100% controlled by the driver, plus with a manual you can step it up and run a 2 step.
Launching and flash stalling are two very different things. Take a regular 4R and someone can powerbrake it to any rpm he wants and let go like a person in a manual (without bogging mind you),
a person with a high stall can tailor his TC to where he wants his stall and it will flash regardless of whether he's stopped or not - mind you multiplying torque in the process
Again, driver chooses when he/she wants to shift. Of course, shifts can be missed, but a non-built auto can hunt for shifts aswell, which isnt good.
I wasn't comparing a stock 4R in my examples. And a trans "searching" for shifts is one that's abused or faulty and going out. Look at YELLOW's 11 second consistant 1/4's on a stock 4R.
You can invest in a lightweight flywheel and/or DS and save more than 10lbs of rotational weight.
You can do the same things on an auto car plus the TC weight savings - changing those things aren't really an argument for a transmission.
That being said, I have nothing against auto's. What it really comes down to is bias and exactly what you want from the car.
I will be the first to say, if it is a drag car, and you want consistancy... you want an auto.
If its a road course car, or an autocross car, you will want a manual. More control of the power band, and that kind of use will fry an auto even with a trans cooler.
Agreed that i would want a manual on a road course - I don't think i'll agree that it will fry an auto. Auto's DO get hotter - but a substantial cooler or a race cooler which has a fan will be sunstantial - along with having a manual valve-body meaning you can select gears just as much. And with a 5R55 you have just as many to chose from.
If its a DD, its a tossup. Just depends on if you want to row the gears everyday, if you have to deal with stop and go traffic... so on.
Agreed
Myself, I will never own an automatic Mustang unless I literally cannot drive a 5 speed car for whatever reason. To me, it takes the joy out of driving, even if its built/stalled. I have NOTHING against an automatic 'Stang, stock or built tranny... I have ridden in some and been VERY impressed, but it just isn't for me.
Many people feel the opposite, and would LOVE to have an auto over a manual and the extra effort it takes to drive one.
I think i'd rather have cars with both than just one over the other. But if i had just one DD (like i do now) i prefer an auto, and a built one helps too.