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  #21  
Old 05-16-2008, 02:43 PM
drfred drfred is offline
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Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: X5world
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Funny that this topic came up

My daughter now living in England, has to give up her US license within one
year. The driving test over there is with a stick shift which we never taught her since her Saabs during college were automatic. She has no difficulty driving on the wrong side of the road so she can just concentrate on the stick. My first time in the UK with a rental I had a 5 speed of which I used
the first four gears since I couldn"t find fifth. The same trip I held up
traffic for 5 minutes after making a wrong turn because I had no idea where
reverse was-I pushed the shift and pulled the shift-really impressed my wife.
Fred
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  #22  
Old 05-16-2008, 03:40 PM
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rayxi rayxi is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by cmyX5go
If you show up at mDs I'll fookin carry you around the parking lot.
L, you crack me up! I just sprayed a mouthfull of latte on my computer monitor when I read that.

The image so far: Laura piggy-backing Phong with Michelle trailing behind on a mobility scooter followed by mD and his gang of club geezers dangling their keys to their manual tranny cars like carrots on a stick.
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  #23  
Old 05-16-2008, 04:15 PM
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motordavid motordavid is online now
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Location: Mtns of Western NC, & SW FLA
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OT, but what's fookin new...

Quote:
Originally Posted by breytonX5
Dear uncle MD,
If I show up at the mtn for stick shift lesson, would you still take me around the parking lot? I know I'm no Michelle or Laura, not even close, but would you still take me anyway? Maybe with the good looks between the two of us we can impress the ol' geezers' lady companions . Just a thought.
Sincerely,
Phong

Hey, Phong...good to read you again! Glad "they" let you out on
work release...

C'mon down to the Mtns: bring your ball chasing sticks and your stick
shift learning good 'tude and it will be cake. There are some hotties here at the Club,
though I realize I am getting older when I look around the
clubhouse for the best looking 60+++ yr old to oogle, :p ... ...
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  #24  
Old 05-16-2008, 06:46 PM
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cmyX5go cmyX5go is online now
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Quote:
Originally Posted by rayxi
L, you crack me up! I just sprayed a mouthfull of latte on my computer monitor when I read that.

I'm glad I can still make you spit!
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  #25  
Old 05-16-2008, 07:24 PM
ravenheart ravenheart is offline
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Join Date: May 2006
Location: Chicago-burbs
Posts: 123
A little late to the party here, but anyways - it really isn't that hard (I hate when people tell me that - sorry) to learn to drive stick if you know the concept. I basicly taught my self in my Z4M.

How? I found a guide on the internet (google is your friend) which explained the concept. Then I took the car out on quiet roads (in our sub) and practiced - never once did I grind gears or cook my clutch (other people have since done that for me ). The Z4M aparently has a really stupid clutch if most reviewers are to be believed, but I haven't tried anything else so can't comment on that, but I still managed just fine. Now - the part that scares me is if I had been taught on a old tranny, would I have been able to do shifts in a new more precise car? I know most people who are not used to the Z gets in it and stalls right away.

This post is getting longer than I thought it would - oh well - here are some quick tips I used to get started:

- Find the point where the clutch bites by slowly letting the clutch pedal out. The bite point is found by the RPM starting to drop, without you moving yet. If you go past the bite point you will either start rolling forward, or stall. This point is different on all cars and as such learning how to find, and keep it there, should be the first thing anyone does. At this point you can begin to apply gas and let the clutch go all the way.

- Be easy on the pedals while you are practicing. Most mistakes happen when people do things too fast, resulting in either jerky starts or lovely piles of chirping tires, followed by stalls. If you feel something going wrong stamp on the clutch to return to status quo.

- The hardest thing (was to me anyways) is to get the car going (engaging first gear) so practice that a lot and then some. It's ok to stall, but not ok to grind gears.

- For uphill starts its ok to use the brakes (either emergency or just the brake pedal) until the car wants to move. Just make sure you eventually can do it, at the very least, without using the emergency brake. The trick is to find the biting point with the brake engaged, and then set off normally, much like at a normal stop, but yet so very different
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