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Comment by LanceJones

4 months ago

It will have simulated gear changes if that helps at all...

To be honest, it may help for the modern Ferrari driver. It doesn't help for those who appreciate the Ferraris from the '90s and before.

  • > Ferraris from the '90s and before

    That was potentially 36 years ago. 36 years from 1990 would have been 1954.

    What changed in technology from 1954->1990, vs change in technology from 1990-2026? Quite a lot.

Really? Simulating a transmission has been tried a few times over the last decade, but it's flopped repeatedly as just silly. It's not likely to impress Ferrari buyers.

The only successful vehicle which has that is a driver-training car built in China. It's electric, but has a clutch pedal and shifter which are inputs to the software. You can even "stall the engine".[1]

[1] https://www.jalopnik.com/this-chinese-electric-car-designed-...

  • Hyundai Ioniq 5 N nailed it perfectly.

    I think by simulating a transmission you mean those internal combustion engined cars with CVT transmissions. Those are terrible yes.