Can you drive a stick shift vehicle?

I learned to drive on a '49 Dodge - I don't think automatic had been invented yet.

Today's stick shifts are NOTHING compared to the old cars. That Dodge would stall if you didn't let the clutch out with total precision.

I probably went 25 years without driving a stick - and when did I have to do it? In a snow storm in PA. I had to get a Jeep that was on a hill sloped down into a building. I wasn't even sure where reverse was on this thing much less how I was going to back it up the snowy hill, but I did.

Then I'm driving down these tiny little back roads (full of snow) trying to remember when you are supposed to down shift to make a turn and where those gears are on this jeep. My old days of stick driving it was on the steerling wheel - the positions are totally different than stick on the floor.

And then there is the trip I made in LA where I drove 2 hours going back and forth between stopping and first gear - I think I made it to second gear once or twice.

My sister's car is stick (she waited 2 months for it to arrive). She likes to borrow our van. One day I moved her car as it was in the way in the drive. My sister is 12 years younger and thinks I know nothing. When she got back home she said "I didn't know you could drive a stick". Honestly almost anyone could move one six feet in a drive way.
 
Not really. My friend had a 1970-ish battleship gray thing (Nova?) that had a column shift. A bunch of us drove it, but that doesn't mean we knew what we were doing.

Same with the '80 Pontiac Sunbird my Dad had around for me to use.

I'm seeing the word "fun" in these posts, but I'm not believing it. :sad2:
 
I started driving a stick in the 60s, and didn't have an automatic until the late 80s. DH also knows how to drive a stick, as does DD (she has only owned a stick, and only drives an automatic if she's driving someone else's car.) DS will also learn how to drive one in a few years.

There was a recent carjacking where the perp, after ordering the owner out at gunpoint, had to run out of the car himself because he couldn't drive it. I'm thinking that a manual transmission might be the way to go to avoid car thieves.
 
Teejay32 said:
Not really. My friend had a 1970-ish battleship gray thing (Nova?)

Hmmm...Nova...battleship grey. Sounds like a "Bondo-Mobile" to me. :lmao: :lmao:

Anne
 

I can, I learned in my early 20's had the car a year and hated to take it out for fear of a hill!
One of our new vehicles is a stick now and I never drive it, I'd drive an automatic anyday.
 

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