DarkMatterGrey
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jul 17, 2024
- Threads
- 20
- Messages
- 314
- Reaction score
- 302
- Location
- Scottsdale AZ
- Vehicle(s)
- 2024 GT Dark Matter Grey 6 Speed Manual "Job 1" (no start/stop)
I'm 62 (almost geriatric) and got the manual. Easiest manual I've ever driven. Hill Assist, Rev Match, Throttle Blip for first and reverse (great when in a parking lot). Hardest thing is getting out of the car (my wife hates it for that reason). My son has a 2022 GT, the helper aids (hill assist, rev match, throttle blip) aren't as refined in his S550 as they are in my S650. He calls mine a semi-auto. My 2022 S550 EcoBoost manual (they don't make those anymore) had no helpers (rev match, throttle blip), which made it harder to drive than the GT V8's.I truly appreciate all the opinions shared — whether it’s manual vs. A10 from a reliability standpoint, which is faster, or which is most enjoyable. But you’re right: what I was really looking for was feedback on ease of use, especially for those of us no longer blessed with youth.
From what I can tell, this forum leans toward a younger crowd — folks in that sweet spot of life where they’ve “arrived” and can support an expensive hobby. As a long‑time enthusiast, it makes me happy to see the torch being carried forward.
I sold my 56 Chevy exactly 30 years after buying it. In that time, I swapped three motors, a transmission, rear ends, and countless mechanical and aesthetic elements ; 100% all me in a townhouse garage. As retirement approached, the car became a serious handful. Keeping a 671‑blown motor dialed in was a constant effort, and eventually I made the decision to let her go. My best friend, who owns wicked 55 and 56 Chevys, thought I was crazy — maybe he was right. But my thinking was to buy a new‑school hot rod with just enough nods to the past to keep me happy. Something I could enjoy in retirement, keeping my hot‑rod identity intact without all the headaches that came with my 56.
So, long story short, what I’m really after is insight into the ease of driving a modern manual. My only memory of driving a stick goes back 55 years, and it was a nightmare thanks to the hilly area I lived in. I don’t know where my body will be in 5, 10, or 20 years (God willing), so I’ll test drive both and make the call. With winter here, I’ve got several months to hunt for the right deal. And if that deal turns out to be a manual, I came here hoping to hear from the “geriatric crowd.”.![]()
Benefit to a Dark Horse is there's no Start/Stop, but there is a $1300 gas guzzler tax. I have an early Job 1 (2023 build) 2024 with no Start/Stop either, but I *only* had to pay $1000 gas guzzler tax. I've looked at Dark Horses, too much car for me, but I get why people get them, especially Handling Package (look up Misha Charoudin Nurburgring Dark Horse on YouTube) for track use.
If HomeLink (garage door buttons on the sun visor) is important to you, supposedly that's going away for 2026. My 2024 non-premium didn't have it (only premiums did), but I was able to buy one off of eBay and it was easy to install, so that could be the solution for 2026's. There's a bunch of 2025 and some 2024's around too, very few Job 1 2024's from 2023 as well, but those had much lower MSRP (and no Start/Stop).
I wouldn't even consider a manual, which is why I bought the V8 after I got hit from behind in my 2022 EcoBoost since they discontinued the manuals in those. That's when I realized how easy the manual is in the S650 V8's.
I hope that helps.
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