There is also a difference between a fluid drive
and one of the gyromatics/prestomatics we've been discussing.
A 'fluid drive' transmission is where you have a
fluid coupling backed by a conventional clutch and a conventional three speed
transmission. My 49 Dodges have these trannys. You need the clutch
to shift gears. You can come to a stop in any gear without
declutching. But, if you leave it in third, acceleration away from a stop
is very, very slow. Usually, you start out in second and use the clutch to
shift to high. First is rarely needed.
The Prestomatic/Gyromatic/Whatever-matics
(semi-automatics) had the same fluid coupling and conventional clutch backed by
a four-speed manual transmission with two ranges - low and high. Each
range could be shifted up or down one gear by a solenoid. For normal
driving, you put the lever in high range and release the clutch. The car
starts in third and when you release the accelerator you are in high. Smae
thing for first and second. It is not possible to go thru all
four gears without a lot of acrobatics (low range, start in ffirst, tranny
shifts to second, use clutch to get high range but you're in high gear so must
give full throttle and wait for kickdown to grab third, and then release gas
pedal for fourth). Whew!
It is incorrect to call the semi-automatic cars
'fluid drive'.
John
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