The Lost Art of Using An H-Shifter

The Lost Art of Using An H-Shifter.jpg
Recreating the feel of a real race car is the core principle of sim racing, and the advancements in equipment reflect this with each new piece that is released: Better force feedback, racing-grade pedals – but as modern race cars usually do not have manual shifters anymore, lots of sim rigs do not either. As a result, driving with a fully manual transmission has become somewhat of a lost art.

Granted, the title is a bit overly-dramatic, but at least it holds true when looking at most modern sims and esports that tends to get focused on. These use modern cars that have paddle shifters on their wheels, the GT3 class being a prime example of this. Some do not even use a clutch for starts anymore, and while others do, analog clutch paddles do the job on the wheel as well. Two-pedal rig setups are no rarity because of this.

It is likely because of this that there are not too many dedicated shifters on the sim racing market. There are offerings by Fanatec, Thrustmaster, Logitech and a few smaller manufacturers, but the choice sim racers get is far from the enormous selection of pedal sets, for example. Still, for enthusiasts of motorsports history (like the author), H-shifters are an essential part of the experience in order to drive older vehicles the way they were meant to be driven.

While using paddles makes shifting gears easier and is absolutely impossible to imagine not doing in a modern F1 rocketship or a GT3, it does not compare to the feel of muscling around an older race car while using three pedals and a manual shifter. It is quite literally a handful, as well as a bit of a workout. Not to mention the coordination part – if you have never done it before, learning to use all three pedals is quite the process, especially on downshifts.

The upshifts are fairly straight-forward, as lifting your right foot off the throttle while pressing the clutch and selecting the next gear is relatively easy. However, using three pedals with just two feet is more challenging: Braking with your right foot (as opposed to the left foot normally used these days in modern race cars), waiting for the revs to drop enough, then pressing the clutch while using your heel to blip the throttle in order to rev-match and selecting a lower gear, sometimes even going down two at a time – it is easy to see why they prefer paddles instead of heel-toeing their way around the track.

Of course, eliminating the process described above makes downshifts considerably less complicated. But to get more immersed in a car that actually has this kind of transmission, nothing beats trying to learn this dance on the pedals. Modern sims offer plenty of vintage content, be it Assetto Corsa via mods, rFactor2 or Automobilista 2 – it is unlikely to form the base of an esports competition, but if you can find a one-off event or a league using cars with a fully manual transmission, it is worth a closer look. A word of warning, though: You might become hooked.

What is your opinion on shifters in sim racing? Have you bothered with learning how to use them for vintage cars? Let us know in the comments!
About author
Yannik Haustein
Lifelong motorsport enthusiast and sim racing aficionado, walking racing history encyclopedia.

Sim racing editor, streamer and one half of the SimRacing Buddies podcast (warning, German!).

Heel & Toe Gang 4 life :D

Comments

For me, heel-toe downshifts are difficult, so I try to get around the difficulties by switching my right foot from the brake to the throttle as I downshift. Might not be ideal, but it's something I can try.
 
Premium
For me, heel-toe downshifts are difficult, so I try to get around the difficulties by switching my right foot from the brake to the throttle as I downshift. Might not be ideal, but it's something I can try.
Just being gentle on the clutch release is also a viable option.

At the same time easing up on the brake a bit while letting go of the clutch also helps.
 
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Premium
To me personally it is amazing how little REAL interest racing and cars has today. But at the same time "normie" drivers are raving about automatic gearboxes, and driverless cars. I don't know how it happened. Maybe traffic jams literally turned our society out of whack ? Because thats sincerely one time manual is terrible.

That doesn't amaze me at all. My current car is an automatic and I wouldn't have it any other way. I run errands with it and use it as a conveyance and nothing more. I've worked from home for the last 14 years and when I go out, my wife is with me the vast majority of the time and I don't get to drive fast anymore so what's the point in having something sporty that goes fast?

Many younger people would rather be on their cell phone than drive and will be more than happy to hand that responsibility over to an automatic driver.

I've had my triple digit cross country drives that are past the statute of limitations now and I once lost my privilege to drive in the state of NC for speeding. I also had a police officer chase me for a number of miles on back roads in a BMW that ended with him pulling his gun on me. ( I didn't know he was behind me and if I hadn't slowed down for a trash truck, he never would have caught me.

Anyway. I don't think many have those kind of experiences anymore and that is probably a good thing.
 
Premium
I love to use my H pattern, it really adds to the realism. There's nothing worse than driving something vintage and using the flappy paddles, it ruins the experience IMO.

I use an SHH Newt, it's a really good inexpensive shifter and it can be changed from a H pattern to sequential in a matter of seconds. They are 3D printed and look quite industrial, which I think is a bonus as most shifters at this price-point look kinda toy-like.
 
I love rowing gears in Group B Rally cars.
Oh man this beautie looks absolutely amazing :D
I would love to use such a thing - but because of some leg issues I have to use a fully handcontrolled wheel with handcontr thr/brake (SRW-S1).
But it looks absolutely yeah amazing :)
 
I picked up a TH8A a couple years ago to prepare for real-life racing (Lemons/Champcar amateur endurance racing). I only have automatic cars and it had been a very long time since I had driven a stick shift, so it was good to get the basic movements and clutch control worked out. I can heel-toe in the sim no problem, but I haven't worked up the courage to try it in the real car yet.

As far as sims are concerned, I like AMS the best out of AMS, AC, and rF2 for stick shift simulation (haven't tried AMS2 yet). In AC, you don't need to use the clutch at all.
 
anyone have any tips for me?
I think the easiest way to heel & toe (for me atleast, with joint & bone diseases) is to just "roll" the side of my foot off the brake & directly onto the throttle without actually taking your foot off the brake. This movement should give you enough braking strenght as well as enough of a throttle blip to not lock-up the wheels.

Ayrton Senna in his NSX is the best showcase for the foot movement I explained. Also, yes, wearing shoes or slippers is needed :p
 
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I think heel and toe is actually easier in real life since you can feel how well the speed is matched between the drivetrain and engine and adjust the the throttle as you are letting out the clutch.
 
I think the big issue is that back in the day you got an H Shifter for free with stuff like a G25 or 7, nowadays the cheeky buggers who make this stuff like Fanatec (so rich they can afford to fully sponsor a race series, who is laughing now wallies) try and charge you 150 quid for something that cosst a few pounds to make and should come with.

Who are the mugs, the mugs doing it, no, the ones paying for it, silly people
 
I still need hat H-shifter and clutch pedal to get to work daily, despite I drive a 2019 car model. My wife, on the other hand, only has shift tabs and a selector where the shift stick used to be, in the same car model but 2016. The 7 speed DSG is quicker in every aspect compares to the 6 speed stick shifter, despite rating at 15hp less on the identical TSI engine. I have to admit that, the future is not the H-pattern shifter.
 
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Are there any really good feeling H-pattern shifters for sim racing that are not as crazy expensive as the pro sim h-pattern shifter? (I am currently using a thrustmaster TH8A) Also, what manual cars would you guys recommend driving in Assetto Corsa, (mods ok) I have trouble deciding what to drive when it comes to manual cars.
Porsche 911 R
Mazda 787B
Porsche 911 Singer by Ben O'Bro
 
Staff
Premium
Always. I love older cars and using the H pattern just feels right. Getting your feet to twist and apply pressure to both the brake and accelerator is the real art, but comes with practice - and a good pedal set up. Having said that, I missed a gear tonight racing the RSR Porsche and lost loads of time/speed but that's the joy of it, human error! The SHH shifter is a robust and affordable H Shifter for those looking to get started, and it's miles above the Logitech ones, or even the Thrustmaster one.
SHH X2.jpg
 
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That doesn't amaze me at all. My current car is an automatic and I wouldn't have it any other way. I run errands with it and use it as a conveyance and nothing more. I've worked from home for the last 14 years and when I go out, my wife is with me the vast majority of the time and I don't get to drive fast anymore so what's the point in having something sporty that goes fast?

Many younger people would rather be on their cell phone than drive and will be more than happy to hand that responsibility over to an automatic driver.

I've had my triple digit cross country drives that are past the statute of limitations now and I once lost my privilege to drive in the state of NC for speeding. I also had a police officer chase me for a number of miles on back roads in a BMW that ended with him pulling his gun on me. ( I didn't know he was behind me and if I hadn't slowed down for a trash truck, he never would have caught me.

Anyway. I don't think many have those kind of experiences anymore and that is probably a good thing.
Did you tie your law breaking experiences to experience of driving an H shifter manual car ? haha

Of course, driverless cars are the solution then. USING MANUAL GIVES AIDS AND COVID, stay at home children, look at boomers they had fun, and look at them now (lives better than any generation in human history).

If world was perfect everyone would drive RWD manual cars capable of breaking traction anytime on purpose.

As far as I am concerned it is greatest indication that world is imperfect. However, it was perfect at some point.

To me manual is enjoyable at any speed, and at any driving style. Even traffic jams never made me annoyed about manual transmission.
 
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I guess there is a certain nostalgic appeal to use an H-shifter. But the reason paddle shifters were invented *33* years ago (it is far from a new technology) was to make shifting easier and thus allow drivers to concentrate on steering the car.

To me, this is a bit like a debate between listening to a vinyl LP or a CD (or streaming, for younger folks.) Some people prefer vinyl for the nostalgia factor, but a CD is a far more convenient format (and sounds better, no matter what some people say.) I'll keep my CDs, but if you love vinyl, by all means, listen to that! :D
 
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I drive every car in a sim the way it's driven irl. Meaning, if it has H-Pattern I use it. Likewise if it uses paddles.
But driving H-shift is so much more engaging. Try a Groub B in Dirt or even an old F1 car on the Nordschleife. Yes, it's a challenge to learn but it's a blast once you master that.
The moment there are no more H-Shifters available in sim-racing I quit.
 
I mostly use paddles but sometimes when driving older cars I'd like to drive them properly. Unfortunately I just can't seem to learn to Heel and Toe. :redface: I have a Wheel Stand Pro with that pipe in the middle and the brake pedal in G29 is quite stiff as many of you know. I just can't seem to twist my ankle the right way and I think it may be impossible with my setup (WSP and Poang chair). Maybe I should start wearing shoes instead of just socks when playing?

What's funny is that I do some weird stuff sometimes (don't judge please lol) like using the h-shifter to select gears while driving with autoclutch, sometimes I may even let go of the throttle and hit the clutch for that bit of realism. I know it's not realistic or anything but it can be fun if you can't do it properly. :roflmao: It's definitely more interesting than just using paddles when driving a vintage car in something like DiRT Rally.
 

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