ANiMOSiTY
BMW Car Club Member
I've driven both.
Honestly, the SMG gives such an involved feel when driving the car.
It frees up the "effort" required when manually shifting, giving you the ability to better concentrate on driving.
You pay more attention to cornering/apexing, entry speeds, exit speeds etc, than worrying about clutch work.
NO human can change gears that quickly either.
Technologically, SMG is far superior.
Its the same physical gearbox as the Manual, but with a few solenoids fitted to it.
The changes are lightening quick and there will be no mis-shifts.
This means no gearbox damage or excessive clutch abuse.
SMG is a little rough though. The gear changes are a bit on the harsh side.
You need to learn how to drive the car smoothly if it's your daily drive.
A simple well timed partial lift-off of the throttle during changes is all that's needed in most cases.
(Even in S1, if you don't do this the changes still feel a tad rough)
The only gripe I have with SMG is the harshness during a mid-corner change.
The trick is to stay smooth while cornering - the harsh gearchanges can upset that smoothness.
For straight line drags.. nothing comes close.
Foot flat and let the box do the rest.
That said.. a manual is still my personal choice for a daily drive.
Ideally I'd have a manual for the road and SMG / DCT for the track.
Honestly, the SMG gives such an involved feel when driving the car.
It frees up the "effort" required when manually shifting, giving you the ability to better concentrate on driving.
You pay more attention to cornering/apexing, entry speeds, exit speeds etc, than worrying about clutch work.
NO human can change gears that quickly either.
Technologically, SMG is far superior.
Its the same physical gearbox as the Manual, but with a few solenoids fitted to it.
The changes are lightening quick and there will be no mis-shifts.
This means no gearbox damage or excessive clutch abuse.
SMG is a little rough though. The gear changes are a bit on the harsh side.
You need to learn how to drive the car smoothly if it's your daily drive.
A simple well timed partial lift-off of the throttle during changes is all that's needed in most cases.
(Even in S1, if you don't do this the changes still feel a tad rough)
The only gripe I have with SMG is the harshness during a mid-corner change.
The trick is to stay smooth while cornering - the harsh gearchanges can upset that smoothness.
For straight line drags.. nothing comes close.
Foot flat and let the box do the rest.
That said.. a manual is still my personal choice for a daily drive.
Ideally I'd have a manual for the road and SMG / DCT for the track.