Wednesday, February 02, 2011

C36 with Manual Transmission

It was Jack's project car - a 1994 mint condition with the 4-speed auto replaced with a 5-speed manual.
The car is spirited, its character totally transformed. My first drive was embarrassing as I could not find the clutch friction point, and the large final ratio was truck-like. Boy, does it have torque and the pulling power? The lack of handbrake on the side does make me nervous. The gearshift is fidgety, light, plasticky yet precise. It shifts like a toy car, lacking even the mechanical feeling of say, a typical German car. A M/T Corolla in comparison has more substantial feel to it. Clutch was not heavy but the feel was vague.

All of those does not stop this C36 as a slightly larger 4-door pocket rocket (its size is the same as my Corolla). The 5-speed does not eat away power like the auto gearboxes do. And the power transmission is direct and clean. And you do feel 280ps under your feet. With the rebuilt engine and the manual transmission, Jack has at least gained 50ps with his C36 compared to other C36s, 4-speed or 5-speed.

The interior and exterior conditions are among the best in the C36s I have encountered. Weaknesses are in the braking (lacking the initial bites) and the suspension setting. As I mentioned before, C36 setup suffered from being too firm (or even harsh) for comfort in the road condition in Hong Kong, yet too soft and bouncy to handle its own weight in the corners. I hope Jack has ideas to cure those weaknesses, which I am confident he will and execute well, with the old-school determination and passion rarely found today.

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