The first proper sequential manual gearbox used in a racecar was with the
Porsche Type 360 Cisitalia in 1946, followed by the infamously unreliable
Queerbox design, pioneered by Richard Ansdale and
Harry Mundy, which was used in various
Lotus Grand Prix racecars during the late-1950s and early-1960s, beginning with the 1958
Lotus 12, and is technically the first proper "sequential" gearbox used in a racecar. Most racing cars also use a sequential transmission now (via a sequential shift lever, with a mechanical linkage, or electronic paddle-shifters), rather than the old
H-pattern stick shift, beginning with the paddle-shifted
Ferrari 640 Formula One car in 1990, which used a sequential drum-rotation mechanism. The first modern sequential manual gearbox with a manual
shift lever was used in the 1990
Peugeot 905 Group C sports car, followed by the
Ferrari 333 SP LMP racecar and
CART Champ Cars/
Indycars in 1994 and 1996, and then the
McLaren F1 GTR,
Mercedes-Benz CLK GTR,
Porsche 911 GT1, and
Panoz Esperante GTR-1 GT1 racecars in 1996 and 1997. This was closely followed by
WRC Rally cars in 1997, 1998, and 1999, and also the
Porsche LMP1-98,
Nissan R390 GT1,
Toyota GT-One, and the
BMW V12 LM' and
LMR Le Mans Prototype racecars in 1998 and 1999.
Touring cars have also used sequential manual gearboxes; starting with the European
DTM series in 2000, which used it for 12 seasons, until a switch to a
paddle-shift system in 2012. The Australian
V8 Supercars series started using sequential manual gearboxes in 2008, after switching from an
H-pattern manual gearbox.
NASCAR introduced a 5-speed sequential manual transmission with their
Gen-7 car in 2022, after using a conventional 4-speed H-pattern manual transmission for many years. Due to the high rate of wear and abrupt shifting action, sequential manual transmissions are rarely used in passenger cars, albeit with some exceptions. == See also ==