DriveSQ Learning Hub — Free Driving Guides for Manchester Learners|Book Lessons →
PRACTICAL · CHAPTER 9 OF 16

Chapter 9: Clutch Control & Moving Off

Master clutch control and moving off smoothly. The bite point, hill starts, moving off safely, and stalling prevention. Essential practical skills for Manchester learners with DriveSQ.

The Foundation of Manual Driving

Clutch control is the single most fundamental skill in manual driving. Every journey begins with moving off, and every junction, traffic light, and hill requires smooth clutch management. If you are learning manual with DriveSQ in Manchester, clutch control will be the focus of your first few lessons — and the skill you will refine throughout your entire learning journey.

If you have chosen automatic lessons, this chapter is less directly relevant to your driving, but understanding the principles helps if you ever switch to manual or need to understand how manual cars behave around you on the road.

How the Clutch Works

The clutch is the mechanical connection between the engine and the gearbox. When you press the clutch pedal down, the engine and wheels are disconnected — the engine can spin freely without moving the car. When you release the clutch pedal, the engine and wheels reconnect, and engine power drives the wheels.

The key concept is the bite point — the position where the clutch plates begin to engage and the engine starts to connect with the wheels. At the bite point, the car begins to “want to move.” This is the foundation of smooth starts, controlled manoeuvres, and confident hill starts.

Finding the Bite Point

Your DriveSQ instructor will guide you through this process step by step during your first lesson. Here is the technique:

  1. Press the clutch fully down with your left foot
  2. Select first gear
  3. Rest your right foot lightly on the accelerator — give enough gas to raise the engine revs slightly (around 1,500–2,000 RPM, or listen for a gentle engine hum)
  4. Slowly raise the clutch pedal — smoothly, millimetre by millimetre
  5. Feel and listen for the bite point — the car will dip slightly at the front, the engine note will drop, and you may feel a slight vibration. This is the clutch engaging
  6. Hold the bite point — keep your foot still at this position. The car is now ready to move

Common Mistakes When Finding the Bite Point

  • Raising the clutch too fast — The car lurches forward and stalls. This is the most common beginner error. Slow, controlled movement is essential
  • Not enough gas — Without sufficient engine revs, the engine does not have enough power to move the car when the clutch engages. The car stalls
  • Too much gas — Excessive revs combined with clutch release causes the car to launch forward aggressively. This is dangerous, especially in traffic
  • Hovering on the clutch too long — Holding the bite point for extended periods causes clutch wear. Find it, then move smoothly

Moving Off Safely

Moving off is the first driving skill you will demonstrate on your test, and the examiner will assess it every time you pull away throughout the test. The correct sequence is:

The POM Routine (Prepare, Observe, Move)

  1. Prepare
    • Press the clutch and select first gear
    • Set the gas gently (slight acceleration)
    • Find the bite point and hold it
    • If on a hill, the handbrake keeps the car from rolling
  2. Observe
    • Check your interior mirror
    • Check your right door mirror
    • Check your right blind spot (look over your right shoulder)
    • Assess whether it is safe to move off
  3. Move
    • Release the handbrake
    • Gently raise the clutch through the bite point while maintaining light acceleration
    • Steer smoothly away from the kerb
    • Check your mirrors once you are moving
    • Build speed and change into second gear when appropriate (typically around 15–20mph)

Hill Starts

Manchester is not flat. From the gentle inclines of Didsbury to the steeper hills around Oldham, Rochdale, and parts of Stockport, hill starts are a daily reality for Manchester drivers. Mastering them prevents rolling backwards into traffic — a serious safety risk and a guaranteed test failure.

Uphill Start Technique

  1. Apply the handbrake firmly
  2. Press the clutch and select first gear
  3. Give slightly more gas than on a flat road (the engine needs extra power to overcome gravity)
  4. Bring the clutch to the bite point — you will feel the car “straining” against the handbrake
  5. Check mirrors and blind spot
  6. Release the handbrake — the car should hold on the hill without rolling
  7. Gently release the clutch further while maintaining gas
  8. The car moves forward smoothly up the hill

Downhill Start Technique

  1. Select first or second gear (depending on the gradient)
  2. Keep your foot on the brake — gravity will want to pull the car forward
  3. Check mirrors and blind spot
  4. Release the handbrake
  5. Ease off the brake gently — the car will begin to move under gravity
  6. Apply gentle acceleration and release the clutch smoothly

Stopping Smoothly

Smooth stopping is the counterpart to smooth moving off. The technique:

  1. Check mirrors (interior, then left mirror if pulling over to the left)
  2. Signal if necessary
  3. Ease off the accelerator — the car begins to decelerate through engine braking
  4. Apply the brake gently — progressive braking, not a sudden stamp
  5. Press the clutch down just before the car stops (to prevent stalling). This is called “clutch down before you stop”
  6. Stop smoothly and apply the handbrake
  7. Select neutral

Dealing with Stalling

Every learner stalls. It happens to experienced drivers occasionally too. Stalling is not dangerous in itself, but it can be dangerous if it happens in the wrong place (e.g., on a roundabout, in the middle of a junction, or on a hill). Here is how to recover:

  1. Stay calm — Do not panic
  2. Apply the handbrake immediately (especially important on hills)
  3. Put the gear lever into neutral
  4. Restart the engine
  5. Select first gear
  6. Move off again using the POM routine

On your driving test, a single stall with good recovery is usually only a minor fault. Repeated stalling, stalling in a dangerous position, or poor recovery can be marked as a serious fault.

Clutch Control in Traffic

Manchester’s rush hour traffic — particularly on routes like the A56, Princess Parkway, Kingsway, and Oxford Road — requires constant clutch management. In slow-moving traffic, you will repeatedly need to:

  • Move off slowly in first gear
  • Maintain a slow crawl using the bite point (called “creeping”)
  • Stop smoothly when traffic ahead stops
  • Move off again within seconds

This stop-start pattern demands excellent clutch feel. DriveSQ instructors deliberately practise in Manchester traffic to build this skill. It is one area where automatic cars have a clear advantage — no clutch to manage in traffic jams.

DriveSQ Instructor Tip

Your left foot controls the clutch like a dimmer switch — smooth, gradual, and precise. Never “dump” the clutch (release it suddenly). Think of it as slowly releasing pressure rather than lifting your foot. With practice, the bite point becomes second nature. Most DriveSQ learners have confident clutch control within 5–8 hours of lessons.

Next Steps

Continue to Chapter 10: Steering, Positioning & Observations to learn correct hand positioning, road positioning, and the observation habits that keep you safe.

Put Theory Into Practice with DriveSQ

Book your driving lessons with Manchester’s highest-rated driving school. £33/hr — manual or automatic.

WhatsApp 07352 932003