My mom gave me several lessons of her own on a '85 ford mustang. My official training in drivers ed was in an olds 88
My mom gave me several lessons of her own on a '85 ford mustang. My official training in drivers ed was in an olds 88
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RIP Dusty July 2 2007RIP Sabrina June 16 2011
RIP Jack July 2 2013
RIP Bear July 5 2016
RIP Pooky June 23 2018
. RIP Josh July 6 2019
RIP Cami January 6 2022
My Dad gave me my first few lessons in stick shift driving in our old
Plymonth. I did pretty good once I got the foot work down pat.![]()
I've Been Boo'd
I've been Frosted
Today is the oldest you've ever been, and the youngest you'll ever be again.
Eleanor Roosevelt
I had drivers' ed right at the time when the gear shift moved from the side of the steering wheel to the "floor" at the front of the console, and right before the right-side rear view mirror became standard equipment. I learned to drive a manual transmission on my dad's 1979 Dodge Omni, which was grey and had an AM radio. That was a terrific little car. I'd switch back to a manual transmission in a heartbeat except that it costs extra! Bummer! I miss driving stick.
My youngest niece is in drivers' ed now, and her behind the wheel car is a Honda Accord. It's got air bags for both front seats and on both sides, all the way into the back seat. And anti-lock brakes, I'm glad they have them driving cars with good safety features.
Praying for peace in the Middle East, Ukraine, and around the world.
I've been Boo'd ... right off the stage!
Aaahh, I have been defrosted! Thank you, Bonny and Asiel!
Brrrr, I've been Frosted! Thank you, Asiel and Pomtzu!
"That's the power of kittens (and puppies too, of course): They can reduce us to quivering masses of Jell-O in about two seconds flat and make us like it. Good thing they don't have opposable thumbs or they'd surely have taken over the world by now." -- Paul Lukas
"We consume our tomorrows fretting about our yesterdays." -- Persius, first century Roman poet
Cassie's Catster page: http://www.catster.com/cats/448678
The first car I ever drove was a 1978 Black Trans Am. Explains a lot, doesn't it? After one trip it that, I did most of the rest of my learning in "my" car.
My first car was a 1982 Olds Forenza. It didn't go quick, but it went from Point A to Point B...but forward only!
I learned in my Dad's automatic. Then I had to learn a standard in his 1966 Mustang Fastback on Jordan Lane in Wethersfield. It is THE steepest hill in the town and teaches you REAL fast how to use your clutch.
Rest In Peace Casey (Bubba Dude) Your paw print will remain on my heart forever.![]()
12/02
Mollie Rose, you were there for me through good times and in bad, from the beginning.Your passing will leave a hole in my heart.We will be together "One Fine Day".1994-2009
MooShoo,you left me too soon.I wasn't ready.Know that you were my soulmate and have left me broken hearted.I loved you like no other. 1999 - 2010See you again "ONE FINE DAY"
Maya Linn, my heart is broken. The day your beautiful blue eyes went blind was the worst day of my life.I only wish I could've done something.I'll miss your "premium" purr and our little "conversations". 1997-2013 See you again "ONE FINE DAY"
DO NOT BUY WHILE SHELTER ANIMALS DIE!!
I still don't understand why we still had Driver's Ed in school, but no CAR!!!
The teacher we had for Driver's Ed had smashed up the car before, had a nervous breakdown or something, and it was never replaced. Sigh. So, we watched film strips and read a manual about how to drive.
Yeah... that was so helpful!
I learned in a 1965 Dodge Dart that had been my grandfather's, my father's, my brother's and then for me to drive. My father disconnected the radio and the cigarette lighter so there were be no distraction (yeah right!) and the gas gauge did not work.
In college I bought a 1960 Ford Fairlane -- no radio and a hand choke. It was like Phred's caddy...a real boat. I paid $175 for it...drove it from Illinois to Arizona -- drove it for a couple of years while in college...and sold it for $375!
Then I bought my first "new" car...a 1974 Mustang -- stick shift. Learned fast! But it was $212 cheaper than an automatic!
I too miss shifting! But urban driving and a stick shift don't go together too well...
I learned in the family car, a red 1964 Rambler station wagon, with white top. It was an automatic. Never learned to drive a standard. When I was buying a car, the salesman was convinced it was SO easy, he could teach me in 10 seconds, took a NEW car off the lot and told me to drive it. I stripped the gears in about 4 minutes!!! I don't know WHAT he told his manager!!!![]()
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Oh, I always wanted a Subaru Brat....LOL, with the two ejector seats in the back....
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Who remembers the AMC Pacer? I perfected my clutch work in that car!
MY parents bought one and we called it the Spacer or the Great Pumpkin.
Yes, It was ORANGE.
It was an effing fun car to drive....when my parents brought it home I laughed and went to check it out....It was used and someone slapped an amp/equalizer into it and it didn't work.I popped the unit out and messed with the wiring and SUPER STEREO! That thing had some watts.....
I miss that piece of junk.
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Driver's Ed was fun. We had simulators in a trailer. You had a car seat,a dashboard and two mirrors, facing backwards, right behind you head.
They would show a movie in a screen at the front of the room and when the
film asked you to look over your shoulder the film would change to a rear view that you would see in the mirrors.
The sims were auto and manual, column shift. The clutch pedal would fold down from under the dash.
The fun thing to do was to get the sim going a zillion miles and hour and drop it into 1st gear.....just to see the speedo drop..
Does anyone remember "Red Asphalt"? It was a classic crash film they showed to scare the bejeezus out of us.....
I was a trouble maker in that class and always asked the teach to see, "Stomp and Stop", he wasn't happy about that.
The cars we learned in had two brake pedal in them. One time I got stuck in a car with a kid that was brutal to drive with. The teach had a mirror in his visor where he could monitor traffic and who was sitting in the back seat.
This kid was tooling down the street when the teach had to slam on his brake, this kid almost crashed us! The three of us in the back were pitched forward and the other two kids started to laugh at the Brutal One. I looked up and caught the teach's eyes in his mirror.
He must have seen one scared kid. I could read him thinking, "Damn, that was close-thanks for not laughing."
Years later I still think of that kid and look for him on the Demolition Derby circuit.
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DODGE DART!
My BIL bought one and took the dog to the park in it.
It was immaculate inside....until the dog scratched the hell outta the headliner.
Great car!
Oh, the memories!Originally Posted by RICHARD
Yup - our Driver's ED cars had the Dual Brakes, too. (No other controls were duplicated
for the instructor - just the Brake.)
After class, all the different car groups would compare notes to see who had made
their Instructor "STOMP his Brake" the most times during the road adventures. Our car
had the frequent *winner* - a lil tiny slip of a girl. She needed both hands and a deep breath to
lift and toss the hood open - then had to stand on the bumper to reach in far enough to
grab the oil dip stick. Then had to stand on the bumper again to reach high enough to pull
the hood back down to close it!
Her "driving" was a non-stop Thrill Ride every day! Teach *covered* his brake with BOTH feet
and kept one hand gripping the seat and the other in a death grip on the door handle. Us guys
in the back seat weren't allowed to utter a word when we were moving ...
and if we made too loud a >gasp<he'd turn around and give us a dirty look.
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Lower insurance rates?Originally Posted by jenn_librarian
When I was in high school that's pretty much the only reason why anyone took that class. We didn't have a car, either, or if we did we had to pay extra and it wasn't cheap, at least a couple hundred bucks.
RICHARD, you're right. Those country squire station wagons did have the wood grain decals on the sides. Our car was pale green and I don't remember if the third seat faced to the rear. That car was the size of TWO Cobalts!
WOW. The car I've always wanted most is a '79 black trans am. You were so lucky!!!!Originally Posted by Cincy'sMom
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RIP Dusty July 2 2007RIP Sabrina June 16 2011
RIP Jack July 2 2013
RIP Bear July 5 2016
RIP Pooky June 23 2018
. RIP Josh July 6 2019
RIP Cami January 6 2022
My dad took me out several times in an old white Dodge pickup, which was standard shift. I remember stopping at a Stop sign and driving on again in 2nd gear! Dad said, "you aren't supposed to be able to do that!"![]()
Driver's Ed was good (new nickname for kitty, RICHARD?) - thorough classroom teaching and lots of road time. I learned to drive an automatic - and in Winnipeg in January! This was back in 1974 or so...I was ready for winter driving! The plough drifts atop the curbs were higher than the car. I am NOT making that up!
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Drove a Pinto at home...Dodge Valiant, VW car that looked like a mini Cooper(still can't recall what it was).
These days, I drive standard. Cheaper to fix the tranny and way better on gas!
"Do or do not. There is no try." -- Yoda
Originally Posted by Catlady711
I know! My brother and I were crushed when my dad sold that car! (even though he replaced it with an '86 Trans Am (which has now been replaced with a '97 Trans Am). If money was no issue, I would definatly have at least 1 late 70's TA!!! ( along with a Mustang, a Corvette, a Charger and a BIG Truck!)
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