I have no idea what this video is about, im only watching because I need to know what "inverted pedals" mean. Logically since pedals are something you press, inverted ones must press you? Or is it pull pedals? Upside down pedals? (Do you operate them with your hands above your head?) Mirrored? (But... Surely you won't need to take it apart just to swap the output of the outermost pedals?) Pedals that are photographic negatives?
So apparently inverted pedals are normal pedals, and non inverted pedals are hinged at the bottom like gas pedals sometimes are, though pretty often the gas pedal is also hinged from above, it's just longer and flatter. So why is this normal configuration called "inverted" ?
Many brands design pedals in the other direction (like Logitech, and Fanatec). Some people switch sides and rebuild. That is why it is called inverted. I also called it inverted because the previously designed pedals were also designed in the other direction. Actually, you are right. this is the normal design. But when using gaming pedals, they are called inverted pedals.
is hard to understand? its all about invert the position, in commom sense, the pedals are on ground, coils pressing DOWN directions, and this inverted are on roof, coils pressing UP direction, just inverted ... my 5 year child got this when i said i need a inverted pedals...
@@jardelrod6105 my first comment was mainly a joke because with no context as a random video in my feed the title was somewhat confusing. Well, at least the original title and thumbnail was cryptic without context; it now seems to be updated to a much more descriptive one. But I still find it amusing that "inverted" is actually the most common configuration in actual real cars.