How Many Times Do You Yank The Shifter To Know It’s In Neutral? Tell Us About Your Involuntary Car-Driving Habits

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David does a lot of things here at the Autopian that we all know about, but there’s also one thing he does secretly: he watches me. If that sounds creepy, that’s only because it is. No, no, I’m kidding, it’s not creepy, but it is A Thing. Once he pointed out this weird shoulder tic I seem to have when on camera, and I get to feel all self-conscious about that, and now he’s noted a habit of mine I’ve never realized before: when I get in a car, especially one I’ve never been in before, I tend to give the steering wheel a little sawing, left and right… Huh.

[Ed Note: Let me just point out the Jason Shoulder Twitch:

There’s a slight one at about 52 seconds into that video, and then there’s a big one at 1:37. It’s always the left shoulder — it just shoots up! -DT]

I had no idea I even did this steering wheel sawing motion until David pointed out that it shows up in the recent Instagram video of me driving Adrian’s Ferrari Mondial:

 

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Yep, there I am, cranking that steering wheel for no clear reason, right as I get settled in there. I think maybe I do it to get, like, settled in with the controls? Get a feel for things? Those tugs on the wheel can telegraph an awful lot of physical information about the car, how mechanical or assisted it feels, how much play is in the wheel, how well the seat is adjusted, and all of that is conveyed almost instantaneously! So I’m going to defend my unconscious wheel-cranking, I think.

Also, there’s another unconscious car-gesture you can see in this little video: the waggle of the shifter to confirm the car is in neutral. I think usually I do a wag-wag-wag to confirm, but it’s possible some people may do more or less? Three seems the right number of wags? I think this is worth discussing, too.

Damn, now that I’m thinking about this, I’m realizing I have one more physical car unconscious habit: if there’s a between-seat handbrake, I’ll check that it’s down multiple times, without realizing it, pushing the little button on the lever and making sure it’s all the way down. I know I picked this habit up from my years of Beetle-driving, where it was easy to, say, leave the handbrake on the first pawl notch there.

So what are your habits? What strange things do you do when you get in a car unconsciously, things that, if you worked closely with David, he’d tell you about?

 

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201 thoughts on “How Many Times Do You Yank The Shifter To Know It’s In Neutral? Tell Us About Your Involuntary Car-Driving Habits

  1. I always use the parking brake regardless of the car’s transmission. Automatic. Manual. CVT (barf). If the car is being parked the brake is going on. For some reason a lot of people seem to think it’s weird…but it’s become a habit for me between driving stick from time to time and the fact that I’ve always been taught that using it puts less stress on the transmission.

    1. That parking brake hangup seems like a uniquely american thing. They even call it an emergency brake instead of a parking brake, like you’re not supposed to use it unless your car is careening down a 23% incline and Dr Evil had your discs sabotaged and the only way to slow down is to use the parking brake.

      It’s a parking brake. You put it on when the car is expected not to move.

      1. I’m confused (as a person who has only driven autos) why some people insist on using the parking/emergency brake all the time. I’ve never had P “give out” or anything.

        I do use the parking brake on steep inclines or similar, though. I really do hate the feeling of questioning the order, though. “Wait, is it hold brake pedal, shift to park, apply parking brake, release brake pedal? Or hold brake pedal, shift to park, release brake pedal, apply parking brake?” And vice versa for starting again and moving.
        And not knowing if the sounds you hear are favorable/normal or not.
        I park on inclines so infrequently that there’s definitely not an “automatic” motion/order for me.

  2. When turning onto another street in my automatic car, I put my hand on the shifter like I am about to put it in 2nd as I did on my manual cars.

    I miss having a manual.

  3. I’ve noticed when I’m on a straight road my hands are always at the bottom of the steering wheel, left hand in an overhand manner, right hand underhand. The weird thing is nobody else that I’ve ever driven has pointed it out.

  4. I tend to go into 2nd before going to 1st when I’m stopped at a light/stop sign. Mostly because one of my cars this makes it easier to go into first and I just instinctively do it in my other car…

  5. I used to do that with the parking brake too, push the button and make SURE that it was down all the way. I’d still do that if my last two cars haven’t had electric parking brakes. I definitely wiggle the shifter to confirm neutral as well; stalling is too embarrassing.

    One that I catch myself doing sometimes is I’ll put the car into first, then into neutral and back into first. I think that came from a Kia I had a while ago which sometimes would look like it was in gear but wasn’t *actually* in gear.

  6. Definitely jiggle the shifter, and if the car is out of gear I will almost always go N-2-1 when pulling away. Some old heap I had in the past was a pain to get into 1st, the added momentum of coming from second smoothed it out. Now it’s just a weird habit.

  7. I also obsessively waggle my shifter side-to-side to confirm neutral. Three different cars and two of them (my Spitfire and my **tears well up** Thunderbird) have oddly positioned shifters. Sometimes in gear looks like neutral.

    I also like to rev the engine a few times on start and maybe right before I put it in gear, just to confirm that it still sounds awesome.

  8. my wife will immediately adjust the air vents every time she gets in a car (driver or passenger). even if she was the last person in the car and nothing has changed.

  9. I do it too. I think it stems from the few times I spaced when parking/stopping and dumped the clutch only to lunge forward as the engine dies. That sting of shame really makes a lasting impression.

  10. We had an old beater Chevy 1500 at a camp I volunteered at. The shifter had as much movement in gear as in neutral. Many a stall trying to get moving in 3rd, sometimes 5th.

    1. A Volvo 244 I used to own had worn-out shifter bushings, nearly that bad but of course with a slightly shorter shifter. The clutch exploded the day after I bought it (I was gently shifting from second to first at maybe 10 MPH) and the shop took a while to get to it (hell if I was changing a clutch on a dirt driveway) and left the up-and-left reverse lockout misadjusted… so when I picked the car up, I slotted it into third and off I went, very slowly.

      I figured it out once I went for second.

      Edit: It didn’t have a tach yet, and while I thought it sounded like it was lugging a bit, I at first wondered if the clutch might’ve been badly misadjusted. Nope, it was perfect, just in third.

  11. Any good Judeo-Christian knows that three shakes of the shifter is the only correct technique:

    “Then, shalt thou count to three, no more, no less. Three shalt be the number thou shalt count, and the number of the counting shalt be three. Four shalt thou not count, nor either count thou two, excepting that thou then proceed to three. Five is right out.”

  12. Yes, Every time I stop in the B, the stick gets a jostle to verify neutral. It certainly also gets the same bump when I start it, because I start the car without the clutch in.

    Because the clutch release bearing on the MG is a carbon faced bearing, the recommendation is to keep the clutch pedal in as little as possible, so I had to re-train myself to just start in neutral, and also to not hold the clutch in at stoplights. So the MG gives me a lot of automotive tics.

    The other MGB oddity is to shift to second before reverse, because there’s no syncro on reverse.

    1. My 67 had no syncro in first and reverse. I hated not being able to shift to 1st without being at a complete stop. 1st was geared so low, no reason to give it gas when letting out the clutch to get rolling most of the time LOL

  13. It’s similar to clicking tongs when grilling or tapping the ratchet strap and saying “that ain’t going anywhere”, in that if you don’t, you won’t be in neutral.

    1. I just used tongs to grab a new light bulb that was just a little too far into a cabinet. Did I clack the tongs?

      You bet your ass I did.

  14. Hmmm… well, I know that I do waggle the shifter a bit to make sure the car’s in neutral. I also tend to make sure the doors are locked, not because I really think that an attempted carjacking might happen, but just because it’s a non-zero chance (plus I grew up in NYC in the 1970s, and am thus programmed to lock doors whenever possible). I also tend to drive defensively, given that the only accidents I’ve had in 40 years of driving have involved uninsured motorists, and the agita/paperwork with my insurance company tends to drag on for months in those cases. I guess I also do the handbrake check (pushing the button and pushing down to make sure it’s completely off) too.

    I think all this on my part is likely indicative of OCD to some degree.

  15. As someone with two manual and two automatic cars, I often absent-mindedly push my left foot into the firewall when starting the latter despite no clutch pedal being there.

  16. Every time I drive my wife’s car, I jab at a section of the console that doesn’t exist looking for the start button, because that’s where it is in mine. Then when I’m done with her car and get in mine, I jam my fingers on a blank part of my dash where the start button is in her car. And no matter how long I’ve been driving autos, I still find myself resting my hand on the shifter like I’m gonna have to shift any moment now.

  17. I shake the shifter thrice (left-right-left).

    As for an involuntary habit, my first car was a 2004 Honda Civic. I had a scheduled recall fix at the Honda dealer, followed by their multi-point inspection. After picking it up I was pulling up to a light and pushed in the brake pedal. Nothing, it went straight to the floor. I then slammed my foot on as hard as I could and the front brakes locked up, followed by pulling the parking brake to get the car to a stop about 10 feet past the line (thankfully my brain did remind me to put the car in neutral during this). It turns out that during the inspection, the tech bumped the brake line and the rust holding it together failed.

    Since then, I always start a drive by pumping the brake pedal with the engine off to test pressure and reaching for the parking brake, feeling how tense it is when pulling up on it. Even after getting a different car I still practice this, somewhat involuntarily.

    1. Oh man. One of my mom’s anecdotes from when a bunch of my siblings were younger was a similar brake failure at an intersection. She drove through an adjacent fence onto a field to avoid the middle of the intersection, and while waiting for the tow truck, a guy went underneath to look and said “do you have any enemies?”

      The car had been in an accident not too long prior and this was the first (or maybe second) time she’d driven it since the repair. The collision center apparently forgot to hook the brake line back up.

      They were quite grateful we didn’t sue. (“it was an honest mistake”, my mom says. Sheesh…)

  18. I seesaw the steering wheel too. I do it to make sure it’s not heavily clocked in the lock position which won’t allow me to turn the key. I also check to see if I’m in first gear a couple of times while at a stop light. Sometime I catch myself being in 3rd so it just became a habit.

    1. Yeah, I only recently noticed that I check that I’m in 1st once or twice while waiting for a light to change. Mostly if I’m the first person in line at the light, just so I don’t hold anyone up. I kinda do it subconsciously as soon as I see the traffic light start to cycle.

  19. I do that handbrake- button thing too. I used to use the space between the seat and the handbrake lever as a cupholder, and it was easy to raise the lever one click pulling the drink out. So I got in the habit of checking.

    And if anyone doesn’t do the neutral shifter waggle (two reps, for me) before letting the clutch up, they’re a fool.

  20. Make sure the passenger door is locked. Then I can ignore the wife as I crank it up and start to pull away. After 40 years it still kills every time.

    And the first thing that really gets done is to pretend to adjust the rear view mirror, just to make sure she hasn’t hired a hit man, yet….

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