oOple.com Forums

oOple.com Forums (http://www.oople.com/forums/index.php)
-   The PlayGround (http://www.oople.com/forums/forumdisplay.php?f=45)
-   -   Driving (http://www.oople.com/forums/showthread.php?t=16437)

low13 29-11-2008 05:07 PM

i was 17 in september and have been driving in fields and on car parks since i was 13 or so but i've had 14 lessons so far and go out on weekend with my dad and am only just ready for my test it could be done without an instructor but really it'll take longer and you might not be as safer driver without an instructor some schools can pass you in 10 hours but imo its better to do about 12 or more before u'll be ready.thats just me though you might pass after no lessons but everyone i know who has passed did similar amount of lessons before they were ready.

Mike Hudson 29-11-2008 05:18 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jonathan (Post 182833)
This isnt true. The car just needs L plates and an extra rear view mirror.

:confused: i stand corrected, I though it was compulsary :eh?:

Al3xis007 29-11-2008 05:37 PM

driving instructors teach you how to pass the test, so you'd need a few for things to learn tricks and tips etc.
when you pass, you teach yourself how to drive

mobile chicane 29-11-2008 06:36 PM

My girlfriend failed 3 tests over a 8 yr period then I got her a bannger and tought her myself, this included me driving her banger as I normaly would drive a car and giving her a note book and pen so she could point out all the mistakes I had made ( deliberate or not ) and learn from the experiance, she also had a couple of mock tests with an instrcutior and finaly passed :)

The bannger was totaly road legal so before it died I tought her how to hand break turn and some other fun manouvers :)

we also did some motorway stuff lane dicipline blind spots getting on getting off aproach speed etc.


15 yrs ago I passed my test 1st time with only 7 lessons, how ?

I did realy well until the examiner forgot we were in a dual controll car streached out her legs and hit the brakes and clutch realy hard, I managed to indicate check mirrors and pull the car to the kerb in about 5 seconds, she was so flusterd she spent the remailder of the test chatting at me and missed a few mistakes I would have failed on.

Needless to say when she told me I'd passed I put all thoughts of taking the matter of the dual controlls and their impropper use any further out of my mind;)

Chris Harte 30-11-2008 06:50 PM

Here are requirements of cars suitable for tests

I would recommend choosing an instructor who isn't in it for the money and not just to get you through the test. I would try a few different driving schools and pick the best one for you and one that takes you beyond test standard including hazard perception and blind spot checking!! Sometimes a more expensive instructor and longer time taken is better then a cheap and fast way to learn.
I started learning in september 07 and passed in june 08 after failing once for a test where i felt i was not ready to be on the road on my own.

That what i did when i learnt and so far touch wood it has helped me not to crash into anyone. I also did my pass plus with my instructor.

Chris

B4 Sloth 30-11-2008 07:30 PM

I would advise an instructor that comes well recommended locally. I would not however have lessons from the start, only when you have grasped the basics.

Basic clutch and car control, such as hill starts etc can be taught by family etc. You dont want to spend 15 quid and an hour learning to bunny hop in an instructors car!!!!
There are various locations such as old airports etc that allow you to use their site, set out with junctions etc so u are not on the road causing mayhem or having confidence knocked and being put off for life.

I had 6 lessons, drove family car whenever we all went out. I know this 17 years ago. I do cringe when i hear that people spend several hundred quid on lessons.
Hasnt done me any harm...have been advanced driver for years too.

Good luck, be careful, there are many idiots out there.

MK999 01-12-2008 02:48 PM

I had a huge number of lessons spaced out over a couple years, problems with time and money constraints meant I had a few long ish breaks and had to start back a bit from where I had got to each time. Anyway by the end of this I could get used to different car (I drove a total of 6 before i passed) in around 45minutes if that, and going to 3 different instructors gave me a pretty varied experience of the different ideas going around, surprising how different everyones opinions and methods of teaching are.

Anyway my main point was the best thing I ever did for learning was buy my own car, insure it (it's actually cheap as a learner just because there's always someone in the car with you, you're all labelled up with the overtake me plates etc) and start driving whenever me/my parents needed to go somewhere. By this time I had had a few lessons, but for the cost of 8 2 hour lessons i had unlimited driving time for petrol money, bargain! (yes my car was under £250 :thumbsup:)

I would say have a few lessons, get used to driving and make sure you know what you're doing, as I was quite often correcting my parents on lane discipline and the highway code :thumbsup: and then find your own car, you're going to buy one eventually anyway so why not get your moneys worth ! :)

It's good to drive a few different cars as well, as some instructors will teach you a one car technique for doing certain manoeuvres whereas it's far better to learn how to do it properly. My last instructor did this and I passed my test doing a reverse park and reverse around a corner for the first time in my own car, parents were usually busy so were fine with a drive there and back in my car but not sitting around for an hour or so while i practiced manoeuvres.

Think there should probably be a prize for getting through that wall of text :eh?:

Lee 01-12-2008 03:03 PM

10 Lessons for me in 9 weeks, nearly 10 years ago :o

You start to learn how to drive when you go out on your own, you have nobody to keep you away from the kerb or hit the brake.

If you get it wrong you die :lol:

mobile chicane 01-12-2008 04:46 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Lee (Post 183225)
10 Lessons for me in 9 weeks, nearly 10 years ago :o

You start to learn how to drive when you go out on your own, you have nobody to keep you away from the kerb or hit the brake.

If you get it wrong you die :lol:


or roll a fiat panda with 4 mates in it on a dis used airfield trying to do a J turn:thumbdown:

we were all fine and the car even passed its next mot:woot:

just pushed it back onto its wheels and away we went :woot:

Chris Doughty 01-12-2008 04:51 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by mobile chicane (Post 183267)
or roll a fiat panda with 4 mates in it on a dis used airfield trying to do a J turn:thumbdown:

we were all fine and the car even passed its next mot:woot:

just pushed it back onto its wheels and away we went :woot:

OK... defo go with an instructor then :eh?:

mobile chicane 01-12-2008 05:04 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DoughtyUK.net (Post 183269)
OK... defo go with an instructor then :eh?:


that was after I passed my test :blush:

I was only 18 at the time though


All times are GMT. The time now is 02:48 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
oOple.com