The Best Thing About The Porsche 911 GT3 RS Is Its Shifter

It's amazing how few cars seem to have their automatic shifters the 'right' way round. The GT3 RS does, and it's awesome to use
The Best Thing About The Porsche 911 GT3 RS Is Its Shifter

A few weeks ago, I named the GT3 RS as the best car I drove in 2016. That got me pondering why I loved it so much, and it struck me that one of the most memorable things about it was the PDK automatic gearbox’s shifter.

I can almost hear you all switching off right now, but stick with me. By shifter I don’t mean the steering wheel-mounted paddles: no, I mean the one integrated into the gear selector itself. Mostly because it’s the right damn way around.

That's the wrong way around, Audi!
That's the wrong way around, Audi!

As someone who’s grown up watching rally cars and racing cars with sequential gearboxes that are shifted with a ruddy great pole that’s pulled toward the driver to change up, that’s instinctively what I want to do when using these kinds of gear selectors. And yet a huge amount are set up the wrong way around.

Perhaps it’s because to the average Joe it makes sense that forward goes up a gear, but to me it seems plain wrong. And out of the performance cars I’ve driven recently that do have these kind of selectors (many cars have either buttons or - in the case of Mercedes - column-mounted shifters), it’s a complete mix of some getting it right and some wrong.

The Alfa Romeo Giulia Quadrifoglio and BMW M4 get it ‘right’ for instance, whereas the Audi R8 - in fact all VW Group cars I can think of - the Lexus GS F and the Volvo V60 Polestar all get it ‘wrong’. In fact most Porsche shifters up until recently were ‘backwards’.

Remote video URL

Thankfully that’s not the case anymore, and in the GT3 RS with its violently efficient dual-clutch gearbox, it means you’re in for a real treat when gunning through the gears. I actually found myself using the satisfyingly girthy, part aluminium selector as much as the paddles, pretending I was behind the wheel of some monstrous 1980s racing car at Spa Francorchamps.

Perhaps it’s weird to pick out something small like this as the most memorable part of such an astonishing car, but it’s something which has really stuck in my head. As the cool kids like to say on Instagram, #takemeback

Comments

Anonymous

Awesome, i love it. Last car was a Chevy s10 so it feels great to me, but always more power on the way haha

01/12/2017 - 03:05 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

Wow, it goes the “right” way. Just like Mazda have been doing since at least 2004

01/12/2017 - 04:37 |
2 | 0
Anonymous

No, its the dual clutch sst

01/12/2017 - 15:08 |
0 | 0
The Abider

Praising an automatic? I abide.

01/12/2017 - 18:06 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

Ir happens to me with the sequential mode of my Q3 S tronic. It is a great DCT but that sucks

01/13/2017 - 11:23 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

you can thank Walter Röhrl for it. the “bosses” wanted it as all the other manufacturers do, the engineers wanted it this way but were too afraid to tell because they might lose their jobs and walter röhrl just said “this is sh*t” after a testdrive and then they made it the way it is now.

02/21/2017 - 08:43 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

Who cares? Just use the paddles

03/06/2017 - 18:42 |
0 | 2

Topics

Manufacturers

Sponsored Posts