Most companies won't rent the joystick driven chairs to people without experience, because, as was already mentioned, they are a lot harder to get the hang of driving.
Power wheelchairs are actually one thing that looks a lot easier to drive than it actually is. I am pretty experienced with driving my DD's power wheelchair from the side, when I sat in it to try to drive it, I thought it would be easy, I was wrong. DD laughed at me a lot.
A few pointers:
-the joystick controls both the power and the speed. The farther over you push the joystick, the faster it will go in whatever direction you are pushing the joystick.
-if you have ever used a computer joystick, a wheelchair joystick works the same way. The joystick is actually sending instructions to a computer that sends power to the motors. Each of the back wheels has its own motor; when you push the joystick straight forward, each motor is sent the same amount of power/speed. When you are turning, one wheel is getting more power/speed.
Actually, thinking of a joystick or mouse and the cursor on your computer are a good way to think about it.
- you don't need to push hard or apply a lot of force. A power wheelchair can be driven with only the amount of force in your little finger.
- pushing hard doesn't make it go any faster or make it go over an obstacle any better.
-it's often difficult to go completely straight in a power wheelchair. If you are not pushing directly straight forward, the wheelchair won't go straight forward. When my DD was trialing a new power wheelchair before she got her new one, she had a lot of trouble going straight. A big part of the difficulty seemed to be that the trial chair was a little too wide for her. Just to reach the joystick, she had to reach a bit to the side, which made it really hard for her to go straight.
Easy to turn, though.
-power wheelchairs don't have brakes you can apply in the same way a car does. It stops because you are no longer pushing the joystick, and the computer is no longer sending power to the motor.
-the more you practice, the more comfortable you will get.
Brochure for rhe gogo chair.I don't know how you are traveling, but if you are traveling by bus, I would definately transfer to a bus seat. Because it is designed to be taken apart to put in a car, it doesn't look like it has any good, sturdy spots for tieing it down in the bus.