I think the act of fully depressing (to the stop) eliminates any guesswork of where the pedal is in relation to the clutch.
When it's hard down on the stop, it's disengaged, no question.
Regardless, if more or less effort is needed to press the pedal.
I need to head out and try to change my habit (of a lifetime) to NOT fully depress the clutch pedal to the hard stop.
I'm thinking out loud here:
If I'm holding the peddle in the 'dead area' during the time it takes me to physically shift gear. Could a large undulation/bump/change in direction result in my foot/leg angle being altered, during the time it's taken me to shift the gear.
The result is the peddle moving while shifting = bad things happen.
Pressing the peddle to stop, eliminates this.
The act of pressing against the stop during the shift, removes this risk of the clutch engaging, mid-shift. Does it not?
But like I say, I need to head out and try it.
When it's hard down on the stop, it's disengaged, no question.
Regardless, if more or less effort is needed to press the pedal.
I need to head out and try to change my habit (of a lifetime) to NOT fully depress the clutch pedal to the hard stop.
I'm thinking out loud here:
If I'm holding the peddle in the 'dead area' during the time it takes me to physically shift gear. Could a large undulation/bump/change in direction result in my foot/leg angle being altered, during the time it's taken me to shift the gear.
The result is the peddle moving while shifting = bad things happen.
Pressing the peddle to stop, eliminates this.
The act of pressing against the stop during the shift, removes this risk of the clutch engaging, mid-shift. Does it not?
But like I say, I need to head out and try it.

