Roy Gardiner wrote:
We drove in my Lexus, an automatic. One thing he said went as follows; on stopping at traffic lights (or anywhere) one should (a) place the car in Park (b) apply the handbrake, not leave the car in gear and rest one's foot on the footbrake. The reasoning is that (a) it's the law that the car must be imobilised (b) what if I am rear-ended; the car would be under power still.
Does this make sense to you all? Does anyone do that, every time? Note: this is about auto boxes, not manuals.
I'm no expert on automatic driving - indeed the one time I drove an automatic for any distance I was trying to do what you describe and made a fool of myself.
I'm a member of the IAM and I'm sure this has been discussed on their web forum. I think the general consensus was that you should leave an auto in Drive and hold it on the handbrake unless you're going to be stopped for a prolonged period - it's not the same as taking a manual out of gear.
Some groups within the IAM do still take a rather anal box-checking approach but hopefully this is dying out.
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99% of my driving is urban, with traffic lights every 400 yards or so. I'm never going to drive like that, so I could never pass an IAM test. So no more lessons at £20+ per hour. Am I wrong? Why?
Er, you shouldn't have to pay for IAM training, which is done by unpaid observers. You pay a single upfront fee of (I think) £85 which covers the "associate course", the test fee and one year's membership. This will include typically around eight 90-minute observed runs prior to the test. It's not worth paying for "professional" advanced lessons and I would imagine that as a former racing cyclist your general observation and roadcraft will be better than average anyway.
I think it's beneficial whatever type of driving you do - and when you do venture out of town you would feel the benefit even more.