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Zeroshift

B Y D AV E C O L E M A N PHOTOGRAPHY BY JAMES TATE

The only gearbox the future really needs

In any given quarter mile there is nearly a second of just sitting there coasting. On the average road course, maybe 2
or 3 seconds per lap of utterly failing to accelerate. In something like the Dakar rally, it could possibly be an entire week thats wasted. That time, of course, is spent standing on the clutch and stirring the stick. Shifting gears the normal way is a colossal waste of time. A blazingly fast shift takes about a quarter of a second. Make eight upshifts per lap and you just blew 2 seconds. Do 30 laps and thats a minute of coasting that could have been spent accelerating. Imagine this instead: You launch in first gear just like any other car (with a cloud of tire smoke and a dent in the firewall, of course), but when you get to redline, instead of jabbing the clutch and grabbing second, you keep your right foot planted, do 94
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Zeroshift

The four dogs sticking out the side of the gear t into the four slots on the dog ring. If I were king of the world, these slots would be called dog houses, but they aren't. Since the dog ring is splined to the input shaft (or it could be on the output shaft, but let's not confuse things too much) this dog-in-the-house arrangement locks the gear to the engine. Notice how much bigger the houses are than the dogs. This way, if the gear is spinning a different speed than the dog ring, the dogs can still fall into the slots.

absolutely nothing with your left, and slide the shifter into second gear. And with nothing but a clunk and a surge, youre in second gear. No lifting, no grinding, no break in the sweet thrust of acceleration. Thats pretty much possible now with the VW/Audi/Getrag DSG (Direct Shift Gearbox), only you push a button instead of actually touching a shifter. I explained how the revolutionary DSG works in Technobabble back in April 2004 and predicted that someday it would replace both the conventional manual and the dreaded slushbox. I take that back. Before DSG even gets its chance, the considerably less revolutionary (and therefore much cheaper to build) Zeroshift gearbox is gonna kick its complicated,

dual-clutched ass back to Germany. Auf weidersehen. The Zeroshift gearbox, being developed by a British startup company of the same name, is a shockingly simple modification of a good, old-fashioned dog box. Shockingly simple, that is, if you already know how a dog box works.

(called dogs) on the sides of the gear. (Really you can have as many as six or seven, but lets work with three.) Between those two gears sits the dog ring. The dog ring has three arcshaped slots on each side that match the dogs. Theres just enough room between the gears that the dog ring can slide back and forth to engage the dogs of either gear or sit in the middle and not touch anything. This matters because the dog ring is attached to the input shaft via splines, so the dog ring always spins with the input shaft. Slide the dog ring into the slots on first gear and first gear will be driven by the input shaft. Slide it into second, and suddenly second gear is the one being driven. Feel smarter now? There are a lot of important details about dog boxes that I wont bother to explain, but here are two that matter. First, the slots in the dog ring are much larger than the dogs themselves,

HERES HOW A DOG BOX WORKS:


Say youve got your input shaft connected to the engine, and on that shaft you have two gears, first and second. Both gears ride on bearings around the input shaft, though, so as the input shaft spins, the gears dont necessarily spin at the same speed, or even at all. Each of these gears has teeth around the outside (imagine that!) and three arc-shaped warts

The dog ring sits between two adjacent gears and can slide over to engage the dogs of either one or can sit between them waiting to be useful. Here it's engaged in with the gear on the left.

so the dogs can fall into the slots even when theyre going at a substantially different speed. When they do fall in, theyll slap into the end of the slot with a big clunk, but theyll go in.
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DOG BOX GEARS COURTESY OF QUAIFE

Zeroshift
The second important detail is that the face of each dog and the ends of each groove are both angled slightly so that when the dog is pushing on the end of the groove, the two kind of interlock. This makes it nearly impossible to pull a dog box out of gear while youre accelerating. You have to either step on the clutch or lift off the gas briefly to pull the dog away from the end of the groove. via the red bullets while the blue ones just hang out. So far, were still operating like a normal dog box, so lets shake things up. The bullet ring slides the bullets into engagement with each gear via springs. If the bullets are free to move, theyll move with the ring. If theyre interlocked with a dog because of that angled face, though, theyll stay engaged and the spring will just pull hopelessly on them. Were gonna shift gears soon, I promise, but first, one other detail I failed to mention about the dog box: The gears are meshing with other gears. (That should have been obvious.) Those other gears are on the countershaft, and unlike the input shaft, all the gears on the countershaft spin together as one. Now, lets make up some wildly simple gear ratios so you dont have to go buy a calculator. Lets say first gear is 2:1 and second gear is 1:1. If were in first gear at 8000 rpm, the countershaft will be spinning at 4000 rpm because of that 2:1 gear ratio. Second gear will be sitting on the input shaft also spinning at 4000 rpm since its meshing with the countershaft at that fanciful 1:1 ratio. OK, were gonna shift. Ready? Youre accelerating, as usual, so the blue bullets are pushing on first gear and are effectively stuck to it because of that whole interlocking face thing. The red bullets are just hanging out. Yank that lever into second gear and the red bullets slide right over into second while the blue ones keep driving first gear (figure 2). Now, if the red bullets are going 8000 rpm and second gear is going 4000 rpm, it wont take long for the red bullets to slam into the secondgear dogs. Blammo, youre in second gear!

HERES HOW THE FUTURE WILL WORK:


Most of the Zeroshift gearbox is a perfectly normal dog box, but instead of the dog ring, you have a ring that holds six little doodads that Zeroshift calls bullets. Zeroshifts bullets work like the dogs and use a similar angled engagement to lock everything together under power. But, of course, theres a twist. Each bullet has this angled face on only one side. When the bullets slide over to engage the dog on a gear, each dog will be trapped between two bullets, each with the angled faces facing the dog. By now youre confused enough to be looking at the diagram, so youve noticed that one bullet is red and the other is blue. The ring holding the bullets has been removed in this picture so you can actually see the bullets, but just like the dog ring in the old box, the bullet ring is splined to the input shaft and always turns with it. In this diagram, everything turns counterclockwise. So, if youre accelerating and the bullets are around the first gear dogs, its the blue bullets that push on the gear while the red ones just float along (figure 1), not quite touching the dog. Under engine braking, the wheels are effectively driving the engine, so inside the Zeroshift box, the dogs are pushing on the engine 96
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The three tabs on each gear are just like the dogs in a normal dog box. The blue and red things here are called bullets, but they do the same thing as the slots in a dog ring. This image has been simplied so your brain can handle it. In a real gearbox, there would be two bullets for every dog, there would be some sort of cage holding all the bullets and ensuring they spin with whatever shaft they're on, and nally, there would be springs encouraging the bullets to follow the cage when the shift fork yanks that cage toward the next gear. Let's say the top gear is rst and the bottom gear is second. In this position, the shaft is turning the bullets counterclockwise, so the blue bullet is pushing on rst gear.

Here, the shifter has been moved, pulling the bullets toward the second gear. Since the blue bullet is interlocked with the last gear and only getting pulled on by a spring, it stays engaged. Meanwhile, the red bullet gets pulled into place between the dogs of the next gear.

Zeroshift
But what about the red bullets? of power, and we did it with a nearly conventional dog box with some very clever dog rings. Step back for a minute, revel in the brilliant simplicity of this design. Have a beer. Take an aspirin.

Funny thing, first gear is still going 8000 rpm, even though the bullet ring (and the engine) is suddenly going 4000 rpm, so first gear immediately outruns the blue bullets, releasing their interlocking grasp. At this point the blue bullets will pop over to second gear, either because of the spring pulling on them from the bullet ring or because the next first-gear dog has come swinging around and smacked it from behind (figure 3). Which brings up another clever little detail about these Zeroshift bullets, theyre angled on the other side so a dog hitting them from behind will push them away from the gear. Wow, we just shifted from first to second gear at full throttle without lifting and with no interruption

Second gear is turning slower than rst, so when the red bullet hits it, the bullets (and the whole engine) slow down. First gear, still going fast, pulls away from the bullets, setting the blue one free. Just like that, you're in second gear

WHY YOU CANT HAVE ONE YET


Is your head done throbbing yet? Lets think about why you dont have this gearbox in your car yet.

1: They just thought of it a few years ago


Its youth thats the only thing keeping Zeroshift from selling you this technology in a racing gearbox right now. There are bigger fish to fry than your racecar though. The , Zeroshift design has the potential to offer the same ambidextrous performance as the VW/Getrag DSG, putting real, usable manual shifting

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Zeroshift
and seamless slushbox performance into one transmission. And without the DSGs more expensive multi-plate clutches and concentric input shafts, it should be much cheaper to build. Ah, but making it civilized brings up problems two and three. If youre in second gear at full throttle, the red bullets will be locked into second gear. Shift down to first and the blue bullets will try to grab the dogs, but theyll hit the back of the bullet, the side thats cut so it gets kicked away from the dog, and youll stay in second gear. Downshifting here will require a brief lift off the throttle to let the red bullet disengage second gear. Zeroshift could program the ECU to cut power for a fraction of a second to pull this off, but it isnt going to happen with the mechanical simplicity of the fullthrottle upshift. These things are but minor details that need to be worked out. Since revealing its brilliant idea, Zeroshift has found itself sitting on a mountain of investor cash and now employs a full staff of brilliant engineers striving to rid the world of slushboxes forever. S O U R C E S

Zeroshift

2: Shift shock
The gear ratios I made up were a little unrealistic, so the engine wont go from 8000 to 4000 rpm in an instant, but it probably will go from 8000 to 6000. Dumping 2000 rpm worth of engine inertia into the drivetrain in one sudden jolt will cause, well, a sudden jolt. No big deal if youre drag racing. Very big deal if youre trying to sell a car with this transmission to your Great Aunt Ethel. Same thing happens when you downshift. Say youre trail braking into a corner at 6000 rpm and you bang down a gear. Instantly the engine has to be going 8000 rpm, and the power to spin it up has to come from the drive wheels. The car lurches, the drive tires bark in protest and you go spinning into the weeds. So Zeroshift has to work on some way to smooth this shifting thing out. It could be some sort of slipper clutch. It could be some connection to the engine management that cuts power during upshifts or blips the throttle slightly during downshifts. Or something else entirely. Theyre smart, theyll figure it out.

www.zeroshift.com

3: Shifting the rest of the time


Upshifting under power works great and downshifting during engine braking works great, but what if you mash the gas first and then decide to downshift? This will happen with a manual if youre not planning well, and its standard operating procedure on an automatic, which doesnt know you need to downshift until you mash the gas.
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