I inadvertently ended up watching YouTube videos of people teaching a partner or relative how to drive a manual car, and it reminded me how stupid it was to name it a clutch pedal.
You want to accelerate? Press the accelerator. You want to brake? Press the brake. That's easy.
The instructor doesn't need to say "Press the brake!", they just say "Brake!", ditto "Accelerate!".
But what on earth is "clutching"? If anything, the pedal does the exact opposite of that. What it does is "temporarily disconnect the engine from the gearbox so that you can change gears", which is unfortunately a bit of a mouthful and not something the instructor can bark at their student when the car is about to stall.
Any ideas for a better name? Preferable a verb that is also a noun (like 'brake') or a verb that can be turned into a noun by adding an -r at the end (like 'accelerate/r'). It would make teaching/learning to drive so much easier.
Update. The best I can come up with us "release", can be a verb or a noun, when the instructor shouts "Release!" you hit the release (pedal) and it releases the gear box from the engine.
Thursday, 28 June 2018
Why is it called a "clutch" pedal?
My latest blogpost: Why is it called a "clutch" pedal?Tweet this! Posted by Mark Wadsworth at 14:57
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23 comments:
Clutch, manual gears, gears, petrol. How very 20th century
More evidence that English may have been designed by a committee
Change / Changer pedal would work?!
I think its an abbreviation for de-clutch pedal. Be grateful you don't have to teach how to double de-clutch!
'Clutch' comes from what it does. It 'clutches' the drive. The pedal is the control for the mechanism that connects the drive from the power source to the transmission. And it is not just vehicles that have clutches. So do things like power drills. And windmills.
I have absolutely no problem with the word 'clutch' as it is both descriptive and simple.
Pat. How about 'double de-clutching' whilst 'heel and toeing'? Or teaching someone how to change gear without using the clutch (i.e. de-clutching).
You don't teach somebody how to change gear without using the clutch, you tell them how to do it then, when they are alone in a vehicle belonging to somebody else, they practice.
Well, that's how I learnt. ;-)
Thanks all. Pat, agreed, when you press the pedal you "declutch". So the pedal is named 100% wrong. It's like calling the accelerator the "slow down pedal" because the car slows down when you release it.
KtC, "change" is the best suggestion so far.
... although, it would be confused with "change (gear)"
I'm backing Lola. The way a standard clutch works is that the vice action of the outer section clutches (ie holds tight) a central disc to transmit the drive. To declutch lets go the disc, so drive disconnects. The clutch pedal controls the clutch mechanism - how much more obvious and clear do you need? NB. a throttle makes the engine go slower but loads of people call the accelerator the throttle.
W42, it "clutches" when you let go. It does the opposite when you press it.
MW et al. It is the 'clutch' control peddle. As the accelerator peddle controls the throttle (sic) and the brake pedal controls the brakes.
L, yes, I know the pedal "controls the clutch". But the clutch pedal does not "clutch" in the same way as the brake brakes or the accelerator accelerates.
You might as well say, the brake pedal "controls the pressure in a hydraulic cylinder" so let's rename the brake pedal as the "hydraulic".
Disconnect?
G, ta, that's on my shortlist.
Clutching is my second favourite double-D theme
A couple of others - delink and disengage. Not too happy about disengage as it could be ambiguous if, say, you met another car head on in a narrow lane ...
MW.
The brake pedal controls the brake mechanism, hydraulic, mechanical, fly by wire.
The accelerator pedal controls the throttle mechanism, mechanical, fly by wire..
The clutch pedal controls the clutch mechanism, mechanical (linkage or cable), hydraulic, elctro-hydraulic.
I really do not see the problem.
G, those suggestions are heading in the right direction. Thanks.
Mark it seems as if everyone is missing the point. What would you do if the instructor said, "Clutch?" Why should it be different for one out of the 3 pedals?
G, thanks, Kevin the chimp got it as well.
MW - can of worms. If you want to be correct, both the brake and the accelerator cause the car to accelerate (change velocity) as does the steering wheel (which also changes velocity, which is a vector). If you don't incorporate velocity into your thinking, you can't explain why an astronaut in orbit feels weightless, even though they are experiencing 90% gravity there. They are constantly accelerating towards earth, even though their speed does not change, because the direction part of velocity is changing as they move through the arc of orbit.
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