heero yuy 95 wrote:My parents say it's a good idea to get used to driving my car because goofball teenager + 4,000 pounds = very nervous parents.
I agree. Driving is like anything else: practice makes perfect. The more you drive your car the better feel you'll get for how it stops, turns, and accelerates. Here are a few tips:
1. Have your parents with you so you can learn from their experience.
2. Be be smooth and gentle on all your steering, braking, throttle, and shifting inputs. This will give you the best chance of mainitaing control.
3. Pay attention to be, to be mindful of what's happening on the road ahead of you.
4. Sit in an upright position where you can easily work the controls yet still be comfortable. Avoid the classic "laid back" positon.
5. Finally, stay calm and don't get nervous.
Since you've got a rwd car with no driving aides, (like traction or stablity control) you have the opportunity to develop better car control than if you were driving a new fwd car.
The El-Camino has alot of aftermarket parts so you can do alot with it to have fun. My advice is to keep it in good shape, and when it's time to buy something else, keep it so you can fix it up when you're older and have the money.
This message has been brought to you by the Members of the My Job Drives Me Nutz Association.
:hits_self:lol:
"I probably won't enter heaven nice, clean and neat. More like sliding in sideways saying, man, what a ride"
@)}~ Carry this rose in your sig, as thanks, to all the CAA moderators.