KevinC
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Kevin
- Joined
- Feb 6, 2021
- Threads
- 17
- Messages
- 841
- Reaction score
- 1,602
- Location
- Central Florida
- Vehicle(s)
- 2023 JT Mojave Sarge
- Occupation
- Hard Labor
Yeah, I could have commented about my first vehicle, 1969 IH Scout 800. I had to pump the brakes twice for them to engage, never wore a seat belt, the seat weren't even bolted in correctly. On top of that I was running 36" tall tires on a 93 inch wheelbase. I bought it with my own money.Like no seat or shoulder belts?
I figure - learn early, then you won't be surprised in the future and screaming at dad - no one told me about these things......
Yeah, we want better, but I always figured - learn the hard stuff instead of learning easy then being shocked later when you get into that IH Scout.
At 14 I bought my first car - parents said I needed to pay for it, insurance, gas, upkeep and so on.
I was able to drive almost anything by the time I was 16-18. Came in handy later.
I wanted my kids safe, but I also wanted them to be able to handle whatever came their way, all sorts of cars and so on.
I will guarantee if my parents knew how unsafe it was, they would have taken it from me. Not saying they turned a blind eye and hoped for the best, but they didn't know. I drove it within the limits of what it was safely capable of doing. I learned a hard but valuable lesson on driving. My next vehicle was a brand new Ford Bronco. Because of the overall safety features it had over the Scout, I was probably more careless in it.
I'm not telling anyone with a 16 y/o child to go buy them a piece of crap hooptie and hand them the keys and say " go learn the hard way". But...making them learn some driving style/conditions that force them to be more aware isn't a bad thing either
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