automatic with a clutch

As a kid, I remember my cousin driving an old Plymouth (maybe a '54) that she said had an "automatic with a clutch". For some reason, that phrase came to mind today. Here is what I found on Wikipedia. Interesting.

The Hy-Drive was a Chrysler Corporation semi-automatic transmission introduced in 1953 in US-market Plymouths.[1] It was a hybrid manual transmission equipped with a torque converter, like an automatic. Although Hy-Drive cars had a clutch pedal like a traditional manual transmission, it was only used to put the car in gear. Once underway, the driver could upshift and downshift using the gear shift without using the clutch or even lifting off the accelerator.

The industry was caught by surprise by the advent of the automatic transmission in the early-to-late-1940s. General Motors' Dynaflow, introduced by Buick in 1948,[2] was a smash hit with the public, very soon being fitted in over 80% of new Buicks.[3] (GM's fully automatic Hydramatic, which debuted in 1939, was in 70% of Pontiacs that year.[4]) Chrysler had previously offered a Fluid Drive fluid coupling (not a torque converter, as it did not multiply the torque) on their manual transmissions, and the Hy-Drive was an evolution of this. It was sold by Plymouth for the entire 1953 model year, and into April of the 1954 model year, when the fully automatic PowerFlite became [5] available.[2] About 75,000 cars came equipped with this transmission.

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