I guess I’ve driven manual transmission vehicles for so long that I “just drive”. I never use the handbrake/parking brake/emergency brake. I move my right foot from the brake to the gas, while letting out the clutch, and it all works smoothly for me.
I recently drove a VW Vanagon van where the shifter had to be pushed downwards, as in towards the floor, and then rotated around towards where first gear would normally be, while depressed, to find the reverse gear. I think I’ve also driven a handful of other vehicles that had a similar arrangement.
One of the ways that people slip the clutch too much is that they leave their left foot riding on the clutch pedal. Hit a bump in the road while your foot is on the pedal and you just slipped the clutch a little. Other situations where you might not think that you are pushing the cutch in, like braking with the other foot also apply.
My car has a “dead pedal” to the left. That is where you park your foot when it isn’t needed for shifting. Not on the clutch pedal. Search riding the clutch.
This is similar to people who drive an automatic with both feet, one on the gas pedal and one on the brake. They may think that they are not pushing on the brake when they are resting their foot there but they are. And their brakes wear out prematurely.
An automatic should be driven with only the right foot. On the gas to go, remove from the gas pedal to the brake pedal to slow. You can tell these people when you are following them. Constant brake lights on and off and you just know they can’t be moving their right foot that often.
In a manual trans car your left foot should only go on the clutch pedal to shift and should be resting somewhere off that pedal when not shifting.
https://news.goauto.ca/5-things-shouldnt-driving-manual-vehicle/
I’ve never had a manual that was hard to get into reverse, but I do have a complaint over my last few cars- their reverse gearing was too high. It was so high, I had to always slip the clutch to back up so I wouldn’t go twenty MPH backwards! Seriously, I looked up the gear ratio, and it was between first and second gear. Reverse should be lower than first!
What’s sometimes called “granny low”. I learned on a pickup like that. It was easier to think of it as having zero, 1st, 2nd, and 3rd gears, and you only use zero if you’re pulling something heavy.
I’ve always heard either “granny gear” or “creeper gear”. I’ve never heard it called “granny low”, though that’s close enough to “granny gear” that I immediately knew what you were referring to.
heat, feathering the clutch (applying power while the clutch is only partially engaged). As the clutch, flywheel/pressureplate get hot they become softer and are more prone to wear and/or warpage