Anyone use the shift paddles?
I use them when I autocross the car. I am a member of the Greater Washington Section of MBCA and autocross monthly in Winchester, VA (Go to www.gws-mbca.org and look at last year's race results).
While at the starting line, I turn off traction control to maximize torque to the pavement. I put the trannie in D2. This allows the car to start in 1st then shift to second. Generally the car will stay in 2nd through the course unless there is an opportunity to accelerate for a few seconds before slowing for a turn. If so, the trannie will shift into 3rd at or near redline. When that happens, I attempt to downshift back to 2nd while slowing for the next turn to retrieve the torque needed to accelerate out of the turn. Most of the time, the steering wheel is at such an angle that I have difficulty downshifting because the buttons are out of easy reach. When I am able to downshift, my times are better because I am on the torque curve for most of the run.
I recently completed a road trip from Woodbridge, VA, through ATL, to Tallahassee, FL. I came home via JAX so I spent most of my time on I-10 and I-95. My last day was spent driving from Florence, SC to Woodbridge. My stats showed an average speed of 68 MPH and an average mileage of 19.6 MPG. In order to maintain that speed, I traveled at around 80-85 for most of the time. I made relatively frequent stops at rest-em-ups to dispose of and take on fluids. I sometimes went as fast as 100 mph to facilitate movement through slow-moving traffic (e.g., while overaking someone in the left lane who was was slow to complete overtaking a slower vehicle in the right lane or while overaking a long line of cars lined up in the left lane when the leader was slow to complete a pass and move right). I've found that the key to high MPG for me is to avoid using the brakes as much as possible. If I have to slow down when approaching a slower moving vehicle in the left lane, I let off the gas or turn off cruise control and let the car coast to a slower speed rather than braking. By maintaining at least a 2-3 second following distance, I usually have sufficient room to slow down without braking.
JR
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I do agree it works but doesn't feel sporty as the R is more like a van than a sports car.







