I recently turned 18, so my parents signed me up for driving school. When I showed up at the academy, I was surprised by the cars they had available for students to learn on. They told me to pick whichever I liked best, and I chose the Mercedes-Benz G500.

  • Dyf_Tfh@piefed.zip
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    5 minutes ago

    Currently learning on a Peugeot e-208 which is electric. Apart from that, t is more or less the same as the manual version.

  • Canopyflyer@lemmy.world
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    4 hours ago

    Driver’s Ed: 1986 Chevy Cavalier and it was a horrible brown color.

    Parent’s Cars:

    1986 Buick Skyhawk: Very crappy car. The gas pedal didn’t so much produce acceleration, but rather an eventual increase of the angular momentum of the tires.

    1970 Chevy Impala: Loved this car. Huge and had a 400cid small block with a 400 Turbo Hydromatic with a 12 bolt posi rear end. It’s the car that really taught me how to drive. It eventually ran 13’s in the quarter mile.

    Learned how to drive manual: 1983 (I think) Ford Escort

    REALLY learned how to drive a manual: 1949 Willys Overland. A friend’s Dad’s car. Why did it REALLY teach me how to drive a manual? Easy, it had a non-syncrho’d transmission, much like the big rigs have. This car taught me rev-matching, double clutching, and an appreciation about how cars really work. It also had a column shifter. Once I learned how to handle the transmission, it was a lot of fun to drive. It made me a much better driver.

    The car that taught me how to race (there were two):

    1985 Toyota MR-2: Was a friend’s car that I Autocrossed (Pro Solo) along with him. He actually made it to Nationals with this car several times. Later he won Nationals with a Supra Turbo. This was in the mid-90’s.

    1985 Corolla GT-S: This was my car. It was the AE86 platform with the same engine as the MR-2. Absolutely ferocious car. It didn’t handle as well as the MR-2, but it was soooo much fun. This car taught me “trail braking” and a lot of other performance driving skills. This remains my favorite car I’ve ever owned, even to this day. I’d love to find one and restore it.

    • densefever@lemmy.zip
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      2 hours ago

      My sister’s first car was an 86 cavalier. It was blue and had a manual transmission. She stalled the engine going over train tracks once and the train crossing lit up as she was trying to restart it. Panic ensued…

  • ramble81@lemmy.zip
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    4 hours ago

    Any other security questions you’d like people to expose? What about the street I grew up on driving that car? /s

      • densefever@lemmy.zip
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        2 hours ago

        It’s often a security question for institutions like banks to reset your security parameters.

        • AA5B@lemmy.world
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          52 minutes ago

          I’ve only seen it as “what color was your first car?” But I learned to drive with my parents cars. They are not the same, nor even the same color

          I suppose for some it’s the same and some may interpret the question differently

  • densefever@lemmy.zip
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    2 hours ago

    1982 AMC eagle wagon with woody side panels.

    The car actually caught on fire while I was driving, and I was known as the person that smelled like burnt car in high school, because that burning rubber/plastic smell stayed in my books and materials for the entire school year.

  • LoafedBurrito@lemmy.world
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    3 hours ago

    I guess it depends on the country, we have to provide our own cars in the US. I used my brothers small Toyota Corolla so i could do the 3 point turns and stuff easier in a smaller car. If you go too far up the curb or into the grass, you fail. Then after i got my license, i bought a HUGE cheap chevy impala. That thing was a boat, but drove so well.

  • village604@adultswim.fan
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    3 hours ago

    A riding lawnmower. Good enough to get the basic hand eye coordination down, so when I drove a real car it wasn’t a big deal.

    The first actual car I drove was a Toyota sienna.

  • Troy@lemmy.ca
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    6 hours ago

    1991 Ford S10 pickup, on the farm, when I was 8 years old. I only crashed it on the farm once – in first gear, stopped. Took foot off clutch and lurched forward into the wall in front of me. In my defense, I hadn’t been instructed on how to turn it off yet ;)

  • DasFaultier@sh.itjust.works
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    4 hours ago

    The car my driving instructor use to teach me in was a VW Golf IV, the first car that I owned and had the opportunity to gather some driving experience in was a red VW Golf II, and the car that I used most to drift and test the limits was a VW Lupo I drove during my time in civil service.

    So, depending on what you consider “learn to drive”, these are probably my answers. All brilliant cars, loved each and every one of them.

  • zlatiah@lemmy.world
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    4 hours ago

    I don’t remember, I wasn’t very into cars at that moment… I just know it was a pretty common car brand among taxis in an economically backwards part of China, so most likely a budget Chinese or Korean brand. Also it was a stick shift