RE: Late Night Learners
Tuesday 10th July 2007
Late Night Learners
Things that go bump in the night
Remember itching to get behind the 'wheel for the first time at 17? If so, a driving school has come up with an idea that you'll wish had been around when you took your test.
Learner Driving Perth is offering midnight lessons, so you can drive as soon as you’re legally allowed to.
Learners are picked up at 11.30 the night before they turn 17 and given eyesight and licence checks before they are put behind the wheel at 00.01. You can’t get on the road much quicker than that...
Discussion
there was something like this where i grew up
basically at 11.30 on the night before your 13th bday, your mates pick you up, give you a glue sniffing test and straight into a stolen Vauxhall Nova to practice wheel spinning and crashing into fixed object such as roundabouts.
as dawn breaks you celebrate your right of passage by warming your hands on the now burning Nova.
i had to wait until by 17th because my parents weren't reformists.
basically at 11.30 on the night before your 13th bday, your mates pick you up, give you a glue sniffing test and straight into a stolen Vauxhall Nova to practice wheel spinning and crashing into fixed object such as roundabouts.
as dawn breaks you celebrate your right of passage by warming your hands on the now burning Nova.
i had to wait until by 17th because my parents weren't reformists.
In harrow there used to be a driving school that you could go to at 15years old . private road and proper lesson .
As with most good things they do not last and it`s a housing state today .More profits in house`s .
I think this would be a nice surprise for your kid or a friend .
You would forget being woke up and put in car then told to drive for a long time. For a new drive it would be a rush.
As with most good things they do not last and it`s a housing state today .More profits in house`s .
I think this would be a nice surprise for your kid or a friend .
You would forget being woke up and put in car then told to drive for a long time. For a new drive it would be a rush.
www.under17-carclub.co.uk is there for people wishing to drive between the ages of 11 to 17 - check it out! Recently on BBC South Today & Radio Berkshire
Alfanatic said:
Hendry said:
...Better still would be the company that offered lessons on private roads or tracks ahead of turning 17.
I think that Mercedes World are already doing that, and they are doing it on an old section of the Brooklands track.
As long as you can reach all the controls you're OK. So most 12-13 year olds should be tall enough. Private track and reasonably priced.Plus also valuable "cool" points when you pass your test on your 17th b-day. Plus the look on the examiner's face when they ask what driving experience you have, you can reply - not much, just 5 years at Brooklands!
jem123 said:
Im from new zealand which has one of the lowest driving ages in the world. I got my learners on my 15th birthday and 6 months later I was out exploring b-roads on my own. Cool isnt it?
Aren't there issues with young drivers in NZ though? Because the WOF (basically a NZ tax disc) includes third party insurance cover, young, less experienced drivers can buy fairly powerful Japanese imports and not worry about sky high insurance premiums like they do here in the UK. Whilst I was in NZ there was quite alot in the press about young fatalities for this reason.Gassing Station | Motoring News | Top of Page | What's New | My Stuff






