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extendor 11-22-2004 10:32 PM

I have just succumbed to a mid life crisis and bought a Mk3 Turbo Supra and it has really put a smile on my face. Now I need to be practical and get to know a few people who can help me keep that smile going. This forum seems great and you all know your stuff. I am farly practical and mechanical so i think i can contribute as well. However, I have never owned a Supra before and I hope you would be willing to share your knowledge with me.

Many thanks :)

Jester 11-22-2004 10:37 PM

hola - nice to meet you. im Rob, im 16 and i live in Pensylvania, USA

suprra_girl 11-23-2004 06:03 AM

hey, welcome to the forum... supra's they give smiles and headaches but when there's smiles there's alotta fun :P
if you ever need anything you can always call here ;) we'd be happy to share our knowledge :)

extendor 11-23-2004 07:37 PM

Thankyou. It was a surprise to see that Jester is only 16. When can you guys start to drive. We have to wait until 17 and then take two tests. The first is theory and the second is practical and then they make you wait until you are nearly too old to enjoy it before you can afford a decent car like a Supra.

By the way I am Chris and 41. If you want to hear about driiving in the UK, I would like to swap experiences etc

Jester 11-23-2004 08:34 PM

in the US you have to be 16 to take the test to get your driver's permit, which is 18 questions, and you have to get 15 right, if you get 4 wrong you fail and you have to wait a week to take it again. The permit lets you drive with a parent. then if you take drivers education, you can take your driver's test, which is an acutal on the road test, paralell parking, etc... if you pass that you get your license and you can drive how ever many people will fit in the car, but you cant be driving before 5:00 in the morning and out past 11:00 at night. Once you turn 17.5 years old (if you took drivers ed. If you didnt you have to wait till you are 18) your license turns into a sr. license, and you can driver whenever you want to.

I have my permit, and my birthday is october 18, so i have to wait till April 22 to go for my license test.

extendor 11-23-2004 09:56 PM

I bet that feels a long time away. Good luck in advance for that. Our system seems a bit more regulated but as to whether it makes it any safer I have my doubts. In my opinion the worst drivers are the oldies (myself excluded). By oldies I mean +65 with really bad eyesight, slow reactions making stupid manouvers because thay cant anticpate what anyone else is doing. Thats not to say I am a speed freak but I do know the difference between slow and safe and they are not always the same.

Is that going to prompt a reply I wonder.

Jester 11-23-2004 09:59 PM

i totally agree with you - there should be an age limit on how old you can be and still drive... or they should have to take a test to see if they are still good enough to drive

suprra_girl 11-28-2004 08:57 AM

i dunno where you guys are but here in New Zealand... at the age of 65 or 70 i believe it is... it is compulsary to resit your license or to just hand it over...
but we still get oldies that can't drive LOL

GOGS 11-29-2004 10:10 PM

hi +welcome
getting a liscence is one thing but keeping it is another.
Cops in grampian region Aberdeenshire are notorious for being sleekit . :( Last month i sat behind transit vans +a tractor for several miles .got to a crawler lane uphill in my v8 sd1 hit throttle in 3rd + guess whos hiding at the exact place to catch people speeding on overtaking :ph34r: bxxxxxxx.I hit brakes rapid but time will tell <_<

extendor 12-01-2004 09:01 PM

Hi Gogs,
Sneaky tactics. It would be very easy to take either side of the arguement but there is no doubting a certain ground swell of opinion in the way the motorist is seen as a source of revenue. Motorists pay fines. Burglars cost money to process. It is a simple law of economics.

If the police deliberately set up a situation that creates all the right circumstances for a motorist to break the law by creating frustration and unnecessary delay then they are not upholding the spirit of the law but being a sneaky dirty rotten SOAB. When the traffic police really need the support of the general public they should not be surprised when they turn their back.

No matter what the police may say. THERE IS A WORLD OF DIFFERENCE between your average speeding offence and mugging some old lady. However, one is easier to catch.

Am I right or wrong. Do you see this sort of tactic employed in other countries.


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