Originally Posted By: Win
I was given the keys to the '63 Chevy (C-50?) trash truck with a four on the floor (first was the creeper) and told to make the rounds, pick up the trash barrels, and take them to the dump.
Or, I was given the keys to the '65 Econoline (engine was between the seats) with a three on the tree and told to make the rounds of the car washes and dig out any pits that were full of muck.
Can't remember which was first - the Chevy or the Econoline, but the learning curve was pretty short - a few stalls and that was about it. Taught a few girlfriends in college, and a wife and daughter. Not a big deal.
It always amuses me that some people think driving a little econobox with a tiny four banger, synchronized tranny, and tiny clutch is some kind of big skill. They should try driving something unsynchronized.
I have...I have more trouble driving an econobox than a 10-wheeler! No matter how you mess it up, you CANNOT stall my work truck! Yes, if you dump the clutch in 4th gear, it will not stall. (In 5th or 6th, it shuts down, the buzzer goes off, and the "ENGINE STOP" light comes on...it won't restart until you turn the key off for ~30 seconds.) It's a Freightliner M2 with a 7.2 Cat and a 6-speed...the ECM automatically adds fuel when you let out the clutch. (In fact, the manual explicitly says NOT to use the accelerator when moving from a full stop.) Compact cars are easy to stall (a 4-banger S10 is among the worst I've driven), most trucks are very hard to stall.