Absolutely. My best experience with this was at Boston, where there must've been a line a hundred people deep at every rental counter and another hundred people upstairs at the kiosk. People were sitting on the ground and on their luggage because they were exhausted from standing there so long. Wives were shouting at their husbands. Kids were crying. Frazzled employees were being hounded by angry mobs each of them clutching reservations for their (apparently) non-existant car. I looked up at the monitor and saw my name and stall number..... I walked over to my car, hopped in and headed for the exit. I was in and out of that place in about 90 seconds flat.Always rent direct from one of the big 3 (National, Avis, Hertz) I prefer them in that order. Sign up for their loyalty program, unless you're flying into a tiny airport you walk right by the desk to a row of cars and select whatever you want. Show your license on the way out and you're on the road.
All the actual vehicles they rent in a category? No. They typically will list an example. In the OP's case (Budget, Intermediate) they state Toyota Corolla or similar.Doesn't the rental place website state what vehicles are in what category?
These days, when you rent a car, you have to figure out all that particular model's electronics before you can get far. It is very frustrating for an old guy.
Chase sapphire preferred does this for no additional charge fyi.Forgot to mention another pro tip, if you have an Amex (if you don't, you should) enroll in their rental car protection. For $19.99 per rental (not per day) they'll cover any damage to the car as primary insurance so you don't have to file a claim with your own car insurance. Much less than purchasing it through the rental car agency. You don't have to do anything except enroll your card one time and then pay for each rental with your Amex. Saved me from paying for a windshield that got cracked by a stone.
https://www.americanexpress.com/en-us/insurance/premium-car-rental-protection/
I have no idea what you are saying. Remember, old guy. A clutch and three on the tree are much easier. Navigation is why I carry my Garmin with me.I'd argue the opposite, with wireless Android Auto and Car Play pretty much standard, all you need to do is pair your phone and you have a very familiar interface appear on the screen. Most importantly your navigation!
Not exactly what he was sayingI'd argue the opposite, with wireless Android Auto and Car Play pretty much standard, all you need to do is pair your phone and you have a very familiar interface appear on the screen. Most importantly your navigation!
Not exactly what he was saying
I rented some POS Chrysler. Even the light switch, sure left side but lower than my knee cap. I could not see it while seated normally.
Not saying this has anything to do with electronics but dang. The light switch?? Can’t even see it in the dark