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MANUAL CAR - LESSONS OR RENT FROM YOU Hi there, I am a 26 year old invididual that would like to learn how to drive mannaual in either a parking lot for a bit, and then move onto the road. I would to know if anyone would like to teach me for couple hours with their car. I was hoping to pay someone 50 an hr for their time, and lessons in a parking lot then move onto the road. I have a class 5, and almost 8-9 years of experience no accidents. I live in Vancouver. Would anyone be interested? I am about to purchase a manual car, and would like help/experience. Thank you! |
My suggestion would be to get a manual car yourself and practice on that. That's how I learned. I did practice on my g27 wheel and gran turismo 5 haha. Either way the hardest part about driving manual is just getting it to move without stalling. After that then it's a breeze |
What car you looking to purchase? IMO moderns easier to learn on as most have some sort of hill assist. If you have been driving that long I would be pretty confident in asma123's suggestion and buy it and learn yourself. Youtube both manual car and how to ride a motorcycle type videos and you will do fine. For me, learning to ride a motorcycle really helped "click" in my head how the clutch is supposed to work and the skills transferred over to the car and improved my driving. Every time I drive I am looking to improve, that's the fun thing about manual cars. It can always be smoother, or faster, or more efficient, and all those qualities are driver dependent. Id say maybe an hour in the parking lot just learning stop and go, ebrake at a standstill to go (if car has no hill assist), emergency stops, and learning what to do when the car stalls (some cars differ, some need to shift to N before you can start again, others may be different. The important part is that you know what your car does if you stall in the middle of a road.), you will be ready for the road. Don't be too hard on yourself, I still stall once every couple months for god knows what, tired, hungry, lazy, whatever, it happens. |
do you have a manual car that you can borrow or practice on? It's better if you're able to drive around the same car for a while. I'll help you out if that's the case. EDIT: keep your 50. just buy me a hot choco or something. |
^ Ditto. I've an E30 which is pretty conducive to learning if burnz isn't available. |
Actually, i will be buying the car out of province. I know crazy right, but would like to learn on a vehicle before buying/going. Any help would be greatly appreciated! Do you think i'll pick it up within a few hours? |
Bring a friend that can drive the car home and then learn imo |
↑. That's what I did. Got myself a $500 civic beater. Took me around 30mins to get a hang of it. Plus I hear lots of people learning from a civic. I guess it's one of the easier cars to learn manual from. Good luck with that.! |
$50/hr is not going to cover someone's burned out clutch, transmission meltdown, or worse, crash it no matter how many years experience you have. do it right and go back to school. this is just an example there are others: https://www.defensivedrivingschool.ca/ https://www.valleydrivingschool.com/...est-car-rental |
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If you are really unlucky you will get one that likes to pop out of gear under certain circumstance. than there are ones that has been abuses over the year, the shifter will be floppy it will be hard to tell which gear you are actually shifting into. Bonus alot of these beater have a fuck up e brake, meaning the whole e brake dance on hill will not work. all this is super overwhelming when you can't drive manual yet. Dealing with old transmission problem when you dont have a basic grasp of manual driving can be super frustrating. Having said that you just need to find a decent beater, bring someone that CAN drive manual to the test drive to make sure the tranny at least isn't all mess up. I've successfully taught my gf how to drive manual in my previous beater ef. However I made sure i got one without the above problems and it wasn't $500 lol. I have view my share of $500 civics. Buyer beware, its hard to learn if you start out with a utter piece of crap. However if you start our with a little pile of shit and you manage to master that, you can pretty much drive every manual out there (giving this new car you are trying to get does have stage 3 clutch) |
Just go out there and drive the car back... fastest way to learn something is if you're forced to do it. I bought my first car and it was a manual. Learned how to drive it while getting it home from the dealer. You'll pick it up in 30 mins if you're forced to. Of course, this was 23 years ago when the traffic was less douchy. |
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If he lives near or has to go through TONS of STEEP hills, I wouldn't recommend "learning as you come home" lol. I remember when I was first "comfortable" taking my car out of the neighbourhood, I was tailgated by a BMW on a steep hill. I stalled, and he kept honking me hard, which made me panic more :( I still remember the smell of the clutch as I finally took off full throttle LOL xD |
Get a Cheap miata. I sure you will learn it by yourself within 2 hrs. |
Driving schools exist for a reason. Take some manual lessons...if you don't have a friend who likes you enough to teach you on their car, you're pretty much guaranteed noone who doesn't know you is going to be willing to do it! |
I've taught numerous friends how to drive manual, it's really easy and not a big deal at all. Only issue is my focus is NOT a good car to try and teach with. Too aggressive and touchy. But as long as you're taught what is going on mechanically it's easy |
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Just go rent a manual car and have someone who has a manual car driver the rental to somewhere and then drive. I mean, thats what rentals are for, right :fuckyea: |
That's actually a great idea. I rented a new Taurus titanium (with 230km on it) for two days, two drivers and unlimited KM. Cost a grand total of, drumroll........ $57.10cad from Alamo at the airport |
Learned in a rhd 300zx fairlady. No ruined clutch and I credit who was teaching me. They had me in a parking lot and wouldn't let me use the gas pedal, I had to learn to engage the clutch in gear with only the idle to get the car moving and make it to 3rd gear without touching the gas. Once I mastered that, I was allowed to use the gas and accelerate. My civic was no easier or harder to drive than that. I actually find newer cars harder as they are quieter and don't vibrate as much. |
IMO, performance cars/clutch are better to learn on cause the engagement point is smaller, so there's less room for error. I teach people the same way, snails, was taught - no gas, get it into 1st and 2nd from a dead stop. Once you can get that down, adding gas and gear changes are pretty easy and driving modern cars is cake. Also, when in doubt, clutch and brake. |
Agreed. My friend taught me without using the gas. Just get to that point where you can get the car rolling and into 2nd without using the gas, very important. Teaches you how to use the clutch properly. |
Go to school, not worth it to go buy a shitty beater to learn on, then insure it, then try to sell it while not getting proper instruction. You deal with shoddy old transmission and what if you can't get home? Do it proper, as someone who did it on a beater and if i had to do it again, I'd go to a driving school. |
:derp: i'm confused... how do you get to 3rd gear without gassing? is the lot you're practicing on downhill? or was that a typo i get the 1st/2nd without adding gas...but 3rd is a bit of a reach without gassing, no? |
inb4 "Granny shifting, not double-clutching like you should" |
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