Roger Mills
2007-06-17 09:47:04 UTC
Since this seems to be a contentious issue - as witnessed by one recent
thread - I decided to try to find out what definition the DVLA uses for
driving licence purposes. Since I couldn't find a definition on their
website, I emailed them - and this is what they said in reply:
"A vehicle with automatic transmission means a class of vehicle in which
either-
(a) the driver is not provided with any means whereby he may vary the gear
ratio between the engine and the road wheels independently of the
accelerator and the brakes, or
(b) he is provided with such means but they do not include a clutch pedal or
lever which he may operate manually."
The wording doesn't seem to me to be as watertight as it might be, but I
think it means essentially that anything with a manually (foot or hand)
operated clutch is a manual and anything without is an automatic even if the
driver has to tell it (or has the option of telling it) when to change gear.
I take "clutch pedal or lever" to means "clutch pedal or clutch lever" as
opposed to "clutch pedal or (any other sort of) lever".
Definition (a) leaves open the possibility of having a manual clutch as a
starting device but not allowing the driver to take any part in gear
selection thereafter but - as far as I am aware - there ain't any cars like
that, anyway. [There may, of course, be cars with automatic (e.g.
centrifugal) friction clutches - which would still be automatics under
definition (b) since there is no pedal or lever to control them.]
To me - as an ex-engineer(!) - all the discussion about whether the design
includes a torque converter and planetary gears, etc. is irrelevant - what
matters is the *functionality* regardless of the technology used to achieve
it.
thread - I decided to try to find out what definition the DVLA uses for
driving licence purposes. Since I couldn't find a definition on their
website, I emailed them - and this is what they said in reply:
"A vehicle with automatic transmission means a class of vehicle in which
either-
(a) the driver is not provided with any means whereby he may vary the gear
ratio between the engine and the road wheels independently of the
accelerator and the brakes, or
(b) he is provided with such means but they do not include a clutch pedal or
lever which he may operate manually."
The wording doesn't seem to me to be as watertight as it might be, but I
think it means essentially that anything with a manually (foot or hand)
operated clutch is a manual and anything without is an automatic even if the
driver has to tell it (or has the option of telling it) when to change gear.
I take "clutch pedal or lever" to means "clutch pedal or clutch lever" as
opposed to "clutch pedal or (any other sort of) lever".
Definition (a) leaves open the possibility of having a manual clutch as a
starting device but not allowing the driver to take any part in gear
selection thereafter but - as far as I am aware - there ain't any cars like
that, anyway. [There may, of course, be cars with automatic (e.g.
centrifugal) friction clutches - which would still be automatics under
definition (b) since there is no pedal or lever to control them.]
To me - as an ex-engineer(!) - all the discussion about whether the design
includes a torque converter and planetary gears, etc. is irrelevant - what
matters is the *functionality* regardless of the technology used to achieve
it.
--
Cheers,
Roger
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Cheers,
Roger
______
Email address maintained for newsgroup use only, and not regularly
monitored..
Messages sent to it may not be read for several weeks. PLEASE REPLY TO
NEWSGROUP!