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OT: anything goes!

Moderator: Edi

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ReinnResauq
Padawan Learner
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Joined: 2002-10-18 09:04pm
Location: Seattle, WA
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Post by ReinnResauq »

Edi wrote:I wouldn't want to drive an automatic if given a choice. I learned to drive a stick shift, and I'm quite comfortable with them. 75+% of cars here are stick shift, and automatics cost more (with the price already high, the cheapest new cars, the really small ones, start at around €14000, most cars cost €19000+).
Driving tests, well, they are pretty strict about those here. I failed twice, passed on the third time. The driving instructors are really anal about every single small detail during the lessons, and the officials who conduct the tests are even more so. It is more common than not to fail the first time.

Edi
In American, automatics are cheaper simply because they're a hell of a lot easier to find. Last time my mom and I went searching for a car at a nearby used car lot, we found NO manuals at all. Actually, we saw a couple of them, older cars that we never had a desire to buy. In fact, in my life, I've been in two manuals, only one of which was made after 1980.

However, I have had experience with them in video games and I do wonder how anyone can confuse the clutch with the brake or gas, since you'd really have to move one leg pretty far over to hit the other.

The one reason I can guess that driver's tests are so easy in this state is that teens are required to take a really high quality driver's ed course before they can get their license. The course is not funded by the system and costs something like $200 to take. I managed to avoid it since I took a course in Missouri (and it was all moot anyway, since I was 18 before I got my license), but even the course in Missouri was pretty tough, the guy did not tolerate mistakes at all.
The gift of Superman is the same in his universe as ours. It's not about his powers, his costume, his persona, it's about the using the gifts he has to help people. We all have gifts too, maybe we can't leap tall buildings in a single bound, but maybe we're good with math, maybe we're charming. We can use our gifts -whatever they are- to help people. We just need to make that choice. And Superman shows us that it's possible.
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Edi
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Post by Edi »

ReinnResauq wrote: In American, automatics are cheaper simply because they're a hell of a lot easier to find. Last time my mom and I went searching for a car at a nearby used car lot, we found NO manuals at all. Actually, we saw a couple of them, older cars that we never had a desire to buy. In fact, in my life, I've been in two manuals, only one of which was made after 1980.

However, I have had experience with them in video games and I do wonder how anyone can confuse the clutch with the brake or gas, since you'd really have to move one leg pretty far over to hit the other.

The one reason I can guess that driver's tests are so easy in this state is that teens are required to take a really high quality driver's ed course before they can get their license. The course is not funded by the system and costs something like $200 to take. I managed to avoid it since I took a course in Missouri (and it was all moot anyway, since I was 18 before I got my license), but even the course in Missouri was pretty tough, the guy did not tolerate mistakes at all.
I know how popular automatics are over there, and hey, it's down to consumer choice. I still prefer a manual shift car myself. We have those high quality driver's education courses too, which are mandatory. They cost $900 and up, so $200 is very little to pay compared to what we need to shell out. You can avoid that if you have a family member who can teach you to drive, but they must meet certain requirements and the car must have a second set of brake pedals installed next to the driver's seat so the instructor can stop you from doing stupid things you don't notice. And it's a good thing that mistakes aren't tolerated. They tend to kill people on the road.

Edi
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