I'm learning to drive a manual car and I need some help. Why does the car jerk?

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The Kid #14

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I'm pretty good at shifting up and down shifting and all that stuff but I have one problem. When I start from a complete stop or am going a relatively low speed I have my foot on the clutch and ease off and start giving it gas. The car starts jerking. Is this because I'm not giving it enough gas or letting off the clutch too early? Also at times when I'm going at a relatively low speed and I shift to 2nd gear. I try to get the car moving but it just revs up. What happens in that situation.

Any help can be appreciated I'm just trying to learn what I'm doing wrong so I can correct it.
 
not enough fuel or too fast letting off just takes some practice

and that sounds more like a bad clutch
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how to drive a manual transmission
how to drive a manual transmission video
 
There's what's called a "bite point" which is different and unique to every car you will ever drive. This point is where the clutch begins to engage and the car tries to urge forward.

Try this - If you keep your foot off the gas and very gently raise the clutch (handbrake fully on), you'll feel the car try to urge forwards when you get to the bite point. You'll also hear the engine note drop. This is the bite point. If you continue to raise the clutch, the car will jolt and stall. This is the jerk you are feeling. It's doing this because the engine is pulling power into the clutch and requires it's reward of fuel to feed the forward motion. If you don't put the right pressure on the gas pedal to feed this need, the car simply stops. Listen for then engine note, it will tell you when the car needs more gas, but you'll need to turn the stereo down to get it right every time.

With the handbrake firmly on, find the bite point of your clutch, and practise the see-saw movement with your feet that releases the clutch and presses on the gas simultaneously. If the engine is racing, ease off the gas and release more clutch. If it's jolting, add more gas and "feather" the clutch (depress very slightly then release). Once you've mastered this, you can get the car to rock (like da gangstas do), then slowly release the handbrake and you should glide away smooth as silk.

Golden rule with manual clutch - slowly means smoothly. If you release too quickly you'll never get a smooth gear change. Good luck - manual cars are the best fun.
 
car jerks because your not slipping the clutch enough so it grabs
to fix that let out clutch not as far and rev more and slowely let the clutch out !

to get car going you must be at high revs then change gear expecially up hills

all you need is more hours driving you will get it
one important lesson always look both ways before crossing at intersection at a green light
sometimes you get red light runners and a side impact generally means death
 
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