Yes, it does make for good discussion and some learning, too!
By 2 separate functions, I meant that they are 2 distinct needs for the driver(in the brain).
1. I want to slow down.
2. I want to drop a gear so I'm ready to accellerate.
I never use the tranny to slow the car down.
You'll never hear my engine "chasing" the tranny.
By that I mean hearing the engine revs increase to catch up to the tranny speed when you release the clutch. If that happens, it would mean the driver didn't tach it up sufficiently and/or didn't time the release of the clutch properly. If you can hear the engine chasing the tranny it means you're adding a braking force to the rear tires, right? If you're already at threshold braking that would cause momentary lock up of the rear tires.........woops! Even worse, if you're trail braking at the time, "Game over."
I'd love to see the data on brake pedal pressure during downshifting. I don't sense that there's any "significant "change in my pedal pressure, but as a driver trying to get the most out a car, I wouldn't want there to be ANY, right?
Other than the possible slight lessening of the decelleration, my braking is uneffected by downshifting. It doesn't take any longer because I'm downshifting, nor do I feel downshifting distracts me from effectively using the brakes. But the data would tell the real story. Strap on that MyChron data logger, Mr. Benbow?
I'm still failing to understand how a driver would know how much to tach it up when shifting from 5th to 3rd.
You push the clutch in, take it out of 5th, go to threshold braking for 2-3 seconds, put it in 3rd, ...........then how much do you tach it up before releasing the clutch? Would you look down at the speedo and guess the revs per mph? I suppose if you let the clutch out slowly it can blend a little easier to make up for errors in revs?
If I run through the gears, I know to tach it up about 500-800 rpm between gears. I don't look at the tach, I know what this sounds like. So the tranny is actually almost always in gear, though the clutch is in.
The up side to this method is that if someone spins in front of me in the braking zone, I can accellerate immediately (because the car is in gear with the revs matched, I can let the clutch out at any time and hit the throttle. If you have to dart left or right suddenly while braking, and you have no throttle to make the rear end stick, you're in danger of becoming part of the mess.
As with most "techniques", there's more than one effective way of doing things. Some video of the differing techniques would be awesome!