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  2. Suicide clutch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suicide_clutch

    Old-style tank shift. Regular clutch hand Shifter - This is where the shifter is a regular knob either located on the tank, which operates through a linkage to the transmission (tank shifter) or on a lever bolted directly to the top of the transmission (jockey shifter or slap shifter depending on the transmission design) and involves the semi-complex task of foot clutch operation and hand ...

  3. Motorcycle transmission - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Motorcycle_transmission

    A motorcycle transmission is a transmission created specifically for motorcycle applications. They may also be found in use on other light vehicles such as motor tricycles and quadbikes , go-karts , offroad buggies, auto rickshaws , mowers, and other utility vehicles, microcars , and even some superlight racing cars.

  4. Quickshifter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quickshifter

    Quickshifter on a BMW S1000RR motorcycle. A quickshifter or quick shifter is a device that eliminates the need to use the clutch or throttle when shifting gears on a manual transmission . This can increase the safety and comfort of the vehicle [ 1 ] and allow for faster gear shifting (usually shifting in less than 50 milliseconds) and is thus a ...

  5. Semi-automatic transmission - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Semi-automatic_transmission

    Semi-automatic motorcycle transmissions are based on conventional sequential manual transmissions and typically use a centrifugal clutch. [34] At idle speed, the engine is disconnected from the gearbox input shaft, allowing both it and the bike to freewheel , unlike with torque converter automatics, there is no idle creep with a properly ...

  6. Gear stick - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gear_stick

    A standard 5-speed shift pattern (on a Peugeot 206 knob). A gear stick (rarely spelled gearstick), [1] [2] gear lever (both UK English), gearshift or shifter (both U.S. English), more formally known as a transmission lever, is a metal lever attached to the transmission of an automobile.

  7. Manual transmission - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manual_transmission

    During the period when U.S. vehicles usually had only three forward speeds, the most common gear-shifter location was on the steering column, a layout that was sometimes called "three on the tree". By contrast, high-performance cars, and European vehicles in general, mostly used a four-speed transmission with floor-mounted shifters.

  8. Sequential manual transmission - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sequential_manual_transmission

    Gear shift lever on a motorcycle (above the toe of the rider's boot) A sequential manual transmission is unsynchronized, and allows the driver to select either the next gear (e.g. shifting from first gear to second gear) or the previous gear (e.g., shifting from third gear to second gear), operated either via electronic paddle-shifters mounted behind the steering wheel or with a sequential ...

  9. Mitsubishi Super Shift transmission - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mitsubishi_Super_Shift...

    Super Shift transmission levers in a Mitsubishi Cordia. The Super Shift transmission, also marketed as Twin-Stick, was a manual transaxle transmission developed by Mitsubishi Motors in the late 1970s and used in a limited number of the company's road cars, most of which were manufactured in the 1980s.