please feel free to define what is meant by seamless
Seamless upshift without jolt can also be achieved with a dual clutch transmission. Two ratios are simultaneously engaged and the taller ratio takes responsibility for drive by progressively engaging its clutch while the clutch for the lower ratio is progressively disengaged.saviour stivala wrote: ↑04 May 2020, 12:53‘There will be some jolt’. Yes. There will always be as long as a gear ration change takes place. No matter how near to zero jolt development progress will get the jolt. Zero jolt in gear ration change can only be achieved with a CVT gearbox.
I mean uninterrupted power delivery.Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑04 May 2020, 21:51please feel free to define what is meant by seamless
(is this only the 'uninterrupted' that Honda highlights ?)
if not ....
the PU is doing 12000 rpm
then quasi-instantly doing 10500 rpm
but there's nothing apparent or measurable ?
(no spike or surge in energy transfer rate due to quasi-instant change in PU rpm and KE ?)
NL_Fer wrote: ↑05 May 2020, 15:27The technology has never been disclosed by the teams or gearbox makers. So only insiders know, how their system works.
What I understand about the basic principle is: car is accelerating, before the shift, (dog)ring is partly disengaged, but the current gear is still being driven by a ratched or sprag clutch type of connection. So effectively the input shaft can only drive the output, not the other way around, no engine braking.
Now the higher gear is engaged, increasing the output shaft speed. At the exact moment this happens, the previous gear driven with the ratched/sprag clutch is not transmitting power anymore.
Yes, you can see this actually in this video.stez90 wrote: ↑05 May 2020, 19:30As a Toro Rosso engineer explained us in a university lecture, there is non power break during shift. The dogteeth of gears have a small "backlash" from driving to driven direction (when torque is reversed). You can engage the upper gear while the current one is still engaged using this backlash. As soon as the new one start to "drive", the shaft accelerates, so the lower gear dogteeth become "driven". But this is not an instantaneous event, because of the backlash. While the teeth are recovering the backlash, you have a very small window of time where they are unloaded and you can disengage them. Too late and you destroy the whole gearbox. But current controls are fast enough and up to this task.
So all you have is a positive spike in acceleration due to the crankshaft inertia, but no power interruption.