[s-cars] Kids and cars

Mark Strangways Strangconst at rogers.com
Wed Oct 12 21:29:33 EDT 2005


My point here, and I am really holding back, is why do we have to learn how to drive out of a bad situation. They can be avoided well before they begin.

I am not saying that the instruction of high performance driving skills are not an asset, far from it. The thread has focused on what car to get to survive a hit, or now, how to correct the car from a skid or hydro plan. This is all well good, but my money and time has been spent getting my child to understand why shit goes bad in the first place and to make sure she is not there when it does go bad.

Kids need to know when things are going south, so they can save themselves. Your child may own a tank on wheels, but that ain't doing nothing when so idiot is behind the wheel that the car she / he is a passenger in. I would think my daughter knows enough to tell that person to pull over and let her out.

This to me is more important than the car she drives (which is a 1988 190E POS). It isn't pretty, it isn't overly fast. But it's big enough and heavy enough to stay on the road in traffic.

(going back to lurk mode now)

Mark 
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Taka Mizutani 
  To: Mark Strangways 
  Cc: calvinlc at earthlink.net ; s-car-list at audifans.com 
  Sent: Wednesday, October 12, 2005 8:59 PM
  Subject: Re: [s-cars] Kids and cars


  The Skip Barber teen course or something similar is required attendance if you can afford it.
  Learning the right techniques and not learning bad habits will pay huge dividends down the road.

  I can't even count the number of times that I've been able to avoid accidently because I was able
  to draw upon past autocross and track driving experience and I don't have that much of that kind
  of experience.

  I know that being able to handle a hydroplaning car at 45mph in a heavy rain with the car getting
  loose and having a car do a 270 literally less than 5 car lengths in front of me, all this happening
  at the same time, would not have been possible had I never spent time doing auto-x and track events.

  I know that having this experience, I was able to avoid major damage to a rental car on an icy road
  (crunched the grille and nothing else, super lucky). Those are only two instances.

  Taka


  On 10/12/05, Mark Strangways <Strangconst at rogers.com> wrote:
    It's about time someone talked about training vs. surviving a crash...
    I have been holding my tongue for a while now.

    Mark




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