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question everything

(48,721 posts)
Sun Jul 7, 2024, 01:21 PM Jul 2024

Baby, Can You Drive My Car? Not If It's a Stick Shift - WSJ

Mary Sampietro got the scare of her life five years ago. It left her disappointed in America’s young people.

The mental health professional was in her stick-shift 2016 Jeep Patriot in a rough neighborhood in her native Houston when she rolled down the window to smoke a cigarette. Suddenly, a teenager stuck a gun in her face, ordering her out of the car. He got in but only made it to the next traffic light before stalling the engine and running away.

“I was like ‘How can you be a carjacker and not know how to drive a manual?’”

For Sampietro, who learned to row her own gears in a 1970s Datsun pickup truck with no power steering, the skill’s increasing rarity is a frequent source of annoyance. Her husband’s career requires her to attend events with mandatory valet parking. The job often attracts college students. One particularly bad experience convinced her that they often lie about being able to handle the odd stick shift like hers.

“This young man ground my gears in a way that made me want to throw up,” she says. “I turned around and parked way down the street and walked. I did not tip.”

(snip)

The result can be red-carpet treatment for this rarefied class of drivers. Garrett Williams, a 40-year-old actuary from Denver, rarely frequents fancy locales, but on a trip he took with his wife to a resort with mandatory valet parking he was told that the one employee who could drive his manual Subaru Crosstrek wasn’t there. As a courtesy, he was allowed to park right in front of the entrance. Older valets, often immigrants who learned to drive on a stick, still have to reassure drivers nervous about their transmissions.

(snip)

Jaden Lamar knows how to drive a stick despite being only 24, but he says very few of the young people who have worked for Lux Valet, the Atlanta parking company he co-owns, can. After one embarrassing experience at an upscale restaurant, he decided to allow manual drivers to park themselves in a “VIP” spot. An employee claimed he had experience but, as the guests sat down at an open terrace with a view of the driveway, he burned their clutch, wafting a nasty odor into the dining area.

More..

https://www.wsj.com/lifestyle/stick-shift-cars-valet-manuel-3a38b206?st=57abx87hm4jxyjj&reflink=desktopwebshare_permalink

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hlthe2b

(106,063 posts)
1. Since I was 16... 'Learned the hard way when I bought a car my Dad did not approve and he merely dropped me off
Sun Jul 7, 2024, 01:27 PM
Jul 2024

letting me figure out for myself how to get home. This was in an East Coast city with a lot of hills and I continue to apologize (silently) to all those people who had to bear with me stalling out at every damned stoplight. But damn if I did not become a clutch/manual transmission PRO by the time I finally made it home.


It irks me now to see service departments--even dealerships--not ensuring that their employees know how to drive a manual. The owner should not be the one that has to drive their manual car on and off the lifts--something I had to do repeatedly for my sister's Jeep Wrangler recently (in GA, not Colorado, where presumedly a lot more off-road 4-wheelers still have the skill).

anciano

(1,531 posts)
3. It's amusing to look back
Sun Jul 7, 2024, 02:05 PM
Jul 2024

over the past 8 decades (yes, I'm really that old) and reflect on how much technology and requisite skill sets have changed and evolved. Many folks today not only can't drive a stick shift, but can't read an analog clock, write legibly in cursive, or even use a flip phone. Are these skills critical to most people's everyday lives now days? no, but it's just interesting how much things have changed.
Thanks for your post.

Old Crank

(4,557 posts)
4. Started in an automatic
Sun Jul 7, 2024, 02:06 PM
Jul 2024

My father said he taught me how to steer then I learned to drive with a manual.

Does a 3 on the tree count as a stick shift? Had an old chevy van that if you shifted wrong the linkage would hang because the bushing wore. Had to reach under the heap and shake the linkage to get it free. When you replaced the bushing it did it again in about 6-9 months...

My 67 Landcruiser had a on the tree, nonsynchro low. Never had linkage issues. Instructions were riveted on the dash, next to the transfercase instructions.

Here in Europe if you can't drive a manual you get a restricted license. Also car rentals of automatics cost more.

Arne

(3,579 posts)
5. The condition of the clutch may affect that pedal.
Sun Jul 7, 2024, 02:14 PM
Jul 2024

Last edited Sun Jul 7, 2024, 03:08 PM - Edit history (1)

Could be new and tight or old and sloppy.
Could be hydraulic, cable or shaft controlled.
Had a motorcycle with a shifter that stuck out on the left..
You had to quickly reach for it and get back on the handlebars
as you accelerated.
Meanwhile shooting flames out the pipes.
No wonder it was called Suicide Shift.

Auggie

(31,774 posts)
6. I started in a manual. A 356C Porsche. I was 11.
Sun Jul 7, 2024, 04:30 PM
Jul 2024

My grandfather let me drive his AMC Muscle Car Javelin across fields when I was 14. Four speed with an 8 cylinder. A beast. Took my drivers test in a manual Opel GT. Owned two VWs with manuals.

I love them. It engages you in driving. If I had enough money I'd have one in the garage right now.

Marthe48

(18,864 posts)
8. My husband tried to teach our daughters and me to drive a standard
Wed Aug 7, 2024, 06:51 PM
Aug 2024

(manual) The only one who mastered the skill was our younger daughter and to this day, she'd rather drive a mnual, but they are hard to find, I think. I will get a new vehicle tomorrow, a 2021 Nissan Rogue. It has CVT, but it also has tabs on the steering wheel if you want to manually shift gears 1st, 2nd, 3rd. The dealer showed me how to do it, and I can't wait to show my daughter after I get the car home. Thinking about it, the tabs are probably more like the console shifter with 1-2-D-R-P positions.



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