I learned in a ford tempo, no a/c, and every time I went over a bump
at 40mph or faster the car would shift to the left if you didn;t
constantly steer off to the right you would end  in the on coming
traffic, the alignment went out every other week on this thing. The
heater worked after running for 1 hour which basically ment I froze
anywhere I went in the winter.  I spun it 2 times on backroads on
black ice, 1 time I ended up in someones front yard the other time I
hit a curb. 23 now and in Cincinnati where accidents are just the
norm. I have already, in 6 months of being here, had my car door
slammed into twice in parking lots,people just fling their door open
with no regard, and had someone rest thier Ford Tracker on my driver's
side headlight/bumper.

Adam H 

On 6/20/05, Dawson, Michael <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I disagree.  My opinion is that first-year drivers should not be allowed
> to have any music for several months.  She needs the experience before
> she can be distracted by music, or her phone, or her friends.
> 
> I'm not saying that experience makes for a perfect driver, but you know
> as well as I, that she hasn't been driving long enough to even know what
> to expect in certrain situations such as a simple stop sign, road
> construction, broken traffic signals, etc.
> 
> I wasn't like this because my training vehicle was a '71 Chevy pickup
> that only had AM radio and no A/C.  I had the windows down, no radio and
> could concentrate not only on the sights, but the sounds of the road.
> 
> Nowadays, all the kids care about is a "system" with subs and CD
> changer.  She has never once said anything about adding stuff to the
> Durango that would make for safer driving.  It's all that damn "system"
> stuff.
> 
> A few weeks ago, I took the CD player from the Durango and put it in my
> Corvette.  She now has the factory with AM/FM/Cassette.  Her mom is the
> one that wants to spoil her with all the other stuff.
> 
> I admit it's nice knowing that she has the strength of the Durango, as
> long as she doesn't roll it, but she doesn't realize how good she has it
> with 4x4, AC, power everything, and a decent radio.
> 
> This has been the main source of friction between me and my wife and
> daughter recently.  I know my daughter and she acts aloof a lot of the
> time and the last thing she needs is another distraction.  But,
> fortunately, she had one of the highest driving test scores, so I know
> she's a good driver, in the technical sense, but there is more to it
> than that.
> 
> M!ke
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Jason Lemahieu [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Monday, June 20, 2005 10:53 AM
> To: CF-Community
> Subject: Her First Fender Bender
> 
> I'm going to argue that a CD player is not actually a distraction, but
> is actually the opposite of one.
> 
> Assuming your daughter listens to music and knows what she wants to
> listen to, she can just put in a CD and there, it's done.  The other
> option is the radio - where she will be constantly flipping through
> stations trying to find a song she likes.
> 
> I guess a counterpoint would be that with a CD player, she can put in
> her favorite song over and over and sing wild and crazy and dance around
> the car while she's driving, but i guess it depends on the driver :/
> 
> 

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