learning to drive
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learning to drive
hi everyone
does anybody know of any land in warwickshire that i could practice driving my moggy.??????
im 16 so not legal to drive thats the only problem. so by practising i will get an head start hopefully!!
and just one more thing is the goverment thinking of uping the age to 18???
does anybody know of any land in warwickshire that i could practice driving my moggy.??????
im 16 so not legal to drive thats the only problem. so by practising i will get an head start hopefully!!
and just one more thing is the goverment thinking of uping the age to 18???
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Empty factory car parks can be useful, so long as you get permission. I gave a single seater racing car its first run in a factory car park. I take it you'll be learning in a Minor????
Last edited by Blaketon on Sat Nov 28, 2009 1:25 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: learning to drive
That rumour has been going for many years, don't worry about it.andrew.searston wrote:and just one more thing is the goverment thinking of uping the age to 18???
Andy W____________1961 2-door 948cc (Sidney)_____________1963 2-door 1275cc (Emily)_______

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- d_harris
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To a degree, I agree with you, it would make the roads a much safer place to be with a much more mature attitude to driving. However, it would not remove inexperience.PSL184 wrote:18 to learn to drive....? Should be 25 !!!!! ;-)
If I hadn't been able to drive until now (currently 25) then I would probabally be unemployed as I live in the back end of nowhere with no bus service to speak of.
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I'm surprised that Minor insurance would be silly money (Or rather more silly than normal). They are not usually driven by boy racers and relatively, they are not costly to repair.
My first car (1982) was a 1974 Mini 1000 and that cost me £148 TPF&T. I think, relatively, things have gone up since then.
I can still remember the "Young driver" stuff. Yes, we have lots of boy racers, who drive "Prattmobiles" locally and they are a menace. However, when I was 19 years old, I saw a complete idiot, trying to overtake over a brow, on a three lane road, into a roundabout. I had not long joined the road and the joker concerned was a couple of cars in front. The white line was against him but it didn't stop him trying to overtake and having a near miss. As I approached the brow, I saw him pull out again and disappear over it. Then I saw tyre smoke and as I got to the roundabout, he was on top of it. He reversed out, nearly collecting a car that was coming round and drove off erratically. The driver was 65 if he was a day. I have never forgotten that and it just goes to show, you can’t always judge a book by its cover. Yes, if the car has silly over the top plastic appendages, those woeful “Ponse” lights, that boy racers seem to fit to the rear of their cars and a two gallon tail pipe, then that might be a clue but a pretty obvious one.
My first car (1982) was a 1974 Mini 1000 and that cost me £148 TPF&T. I think, relatively, things have gone up since then.
I can still remember the "Young driver" stuff. Yes, we have lots of boy racers, who drive "Prattmobiles" locally and they are a menace. However, when I was 19 years old, I saw a complete idiot, trying to overtake over a brow, on a three lane road, into a roundabout. I had not long joined the road and the joker concerned was a couple of cars in front. The white line was against him but it didn't stop him trying to overtake and having a near miss. As I approached the brow, I saw him pull out again and disappear over it. Then I saw tyre smoke and as I got to the roundabout, he was on top of it. He reversed out, nearly collecting a car that was coming round and drove off erratically. The driver was 65 if he was a day. I have never forgotten that and it just goes to show, you can’t always judge a book by its cover. Yes, if the car has silly over the top plastic appendages, those woeful “Ponse” lights, that boy racers seem to fit to the rear of their cars and a two gallon tail pipe, then that might be a clue but a pretty obvious one.
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basically the cheapest way to ensure a classic is with a classic car insurance company, these do not expect to have to insure many provisional drivers so are not, shall we say, 'prepared' for it. Normal companies than insure provisional drivers on modern cars are less likely to give you a good deal on insuring a classic.Blaketon wrote:I'm surprised that Minor insurance would be silly money (Or rather more silly than normal). They are not usually driven by boy racers and relatively, they are not costly to repair.
I too found that I couldn't get provisional insurance on my moggy, it gave me all the more determination to pass my test.

Andrew, please pass my congratulations on to Steven. I'll make sure I never drive anywhere near Kenilworth again.andrew.searston wrote: my bro passed on tuesday


Andy W____________1961 2-door 948cc (Sidney)_____________1963 2-door 1275cc (Emily)_______

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If you're on private land, driving under 17, with no license, you're unlikely to be insured anyway, so if you damage it, you pay for it (or repair it
). You're right to seek permission, it wouldn't be sensible just to head for the nearest car park.
I did it quite a lot, driving vans and trucks around the yard, it did help clutch control and general parking/manouvering.
Maybe find a friendly farmer? Or is there an under 17 driving school near you? (expensive, I know, but maybe worth it, what you learn now, you won't have to learn on the road).
I know what you mean, it'd be great to hit 17 with a good, practiced grasp of the mechanics of driving. In my view, it should be encouraged in a safe environment.
Hope you find somewhere.
Andrew

I did it quite a lot, driving vans and trucks around the yard, it did help clutch control and general parking/manouvering.
Maybe find a friendly farmer? Or is there an under 17 driving school near you? (expensive, I know, but maybe worth it, what you learn now, you won't have to learn on the road).
I know what you mean, it'd be great to hit 17 with a good, practiced grasp of the mechanics of driving. In my view, it should be encouraged in a safe environment.
Hope you find somewhere.
Andrew
Maggie, 1969, 4 door, Almond Green.
And Project "Traveller"...
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And Project "Traveller"...
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Good Evening Andrew. My Son - in - Law (to be) wanted driving lessons. I gave him my old clapped out Astra and took him to our local High School. He drove around and around for hours. We practiced hill starts, Clutch control, reversing and parking. We must have spent at least a month just in the school car park. He took his test test and passed 1st time. Although he has been driving for two years now. I still get very uneasy when he want's to get behind the wheel of my Morris. He has got the "Classic Car owners bug" and is now restoring his own Morris.
As long as you have the right attitude to safe driving you will do fine. You will notice that time will go fast and your birthday will soon be here.
Good Luck.
As long as you have the right attitude to safe driving you will do fine. You will notice that time will go fast and your birthday will soon be here.
Good Luck.
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I remember trying to do hill starts. I just couldn't get it right at first (In my mother's VW Polo). She was not the most patient and in the end (I knew how to do a racing start), I just built up the revs and dumped the clutch. I didn't roll back or stall but I did squeal the tyres. She wasn't amused
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My father then took me out and in one lesson, I mastered it. We went up a local mountain road, where there was a reasonable straightish peace of road. What he got me to do was not a hill start as such but to play around with the clutch and the throttle and get the car to roll back, then go forward and then stay still. We had to watch the temperature gauge and you have to realise that done too much, it would kill the clutch. However, that one lesson was enough. The car was about nine months old and my mother owned it for another few years. The clutch was always OK, so we couldn’t have done too much damage.

My father then took me out and in one lesson, I mastered it. We went up a local mountain road, where there was a reasonable straightish peace of road. What he got me to do was not a hill start as such but to play around with the clutch and the throttle and get the car to roll back, then go forward and then stay still. We had to watch the temperature gauge and you have to realise that done too much, it would kill the clutch. However, that one lesson was enough. The car was about nine months old and my mother owned it for another few years. The clutch was always OK, so we couldn’t have done too much damage.