Admin/Odd Duck
| 1970 Buick Riviera and a 1970 Volkswagon Bug manual.
____________________________________________________ New and improved super concentrated me: Proud rebel, heretic, and Oneness Apostolic Pentecostal.
There is iron in my words of death for all to see. So there is iron in my words of life.
|
| |
Member
| I learned how to drive in a early 1940s thirty-six passenger retired school bus on dirt roads on the Navajo reservation in New Mexico in 1959. It had the floor shift that you had to double-clutch because there were no synchronizers. I took my driver's license test in a 1959 Mercury Monterey on my sixteenth birthday in 1962. I really learned how to drive in the Navy living in San Francisco in 1965. My first car was a 1952 Ford Custom with three on the tree. If you can drive a stick shift on the hills of San Francisco, you can drive anywhere. I also had the pleasure of driving a six passenger Navy pickup in Japan on the right side of the road in 1966 as a duty driver. Talk about white knuckle time.
U.S. Army, Retired
|
| Posts: 3725 | Location: Northwest Oregon | Registered: June 12, 2011 |
IP
|
|
Each post crafted from rich Corinthian leather
| 1984 Mazda pickup, 5-speed.
"The sea was angry that day, my friends - like an old man trying to send back soup in a deli." - George Costanza |
| |
Member
| 1957 Chevy. Rod
"Do not approach a bull from the front, a horse from the rear, or a fool from any direction." John Deacon, Author
I asked myself if I was crazy, and we all said no.
|
| Posts: 1753 | Location: Between Rock & Hard Place (Pontiac & Detroit) | Registered: December 22, 2010 |
IP
|
|
Member
| quote: Originally posted by mbinky: A 1984 Bronco II 5 speed.
I had one too - loved that car. We kept it 18 years, and my son learned to drive in it (truck and boy had birthdays within days of each other) and he drove it through high school. But I took my drivers ed class and road test in a 1971 AMC Javelin in the Bronx. Left NYC at 17 and got the license mailed to me at school when I turned 18.
Light bender eye mender ___________________________________________________________ Texas has yet to learn submission to any oppression, come from what source it may. Sam Houston
|
| Posts: 420 | Location: Central Texas | Registered: July 29, 2012 |
IP
|
|
The Karmanator
| quote: Originally posted by hudr: 2 cylinder John Deere tractors. I wasn’t big enough to operate the foot clutch on the “late model” tractors, but I could lean on that hand clutch and get things done. I doubt I was in double digits yet, age wise.
Mine was my uncle's Massey Ferguson. I learned to drive while bailing hay - getting to and from the fields. |
| |
Member
| Station wagons and 4 speed trucks. |
| |
Member
| Having been born and raised on a family farm in the 40's and 50's I was driving a tractor in the fields at age 12 or 13 so learning to drive a car was easy. And I didn't drive the car in a field, if any of you were wondering about that. |
| |
Member
| quote: Originally posted by hudr: 2 cylinder John Deere tractors. I wasn’t big enough to operate the foot clutch on the “late model” tractors, but I could lean on that hand clutch and get things done. I doubt I was in double digits yet, age wise.
I done a reply to yours. We ate a lot of dust in those days also, right? |
| |
Member
| Oddly enough, a Hyster forklift. From there to a 1968 1/2 ton pickup. Aghhh, growing up with your father owning a lumber yard. |
| |
Good enough is neither good, nor enough
| 1987 b2000 Mazda truck. Stick shift and no power steering. Everything has been easy to drive after that.
There are 3 kinds of people, those that understand numbers and those that don't. |
| Posts: 2048 | Location: Liberty, MO | Registered: November 28, 2004 |
IP
|
|