Got a stupid question
It's not all that hard to learn. Find a friend willing to let you use the car to get the basics down. Then when you get yours, take it to a parking lot, or a parking garage with a slope. Practice it on the flat spots and slopes to figure out how the clutch engages and where.
If you have the car stopped and in first gear on flat ground, you can just slowly let the clutch out and the car will start inching forward, just like an automatic with the brakes off. From there you can learn when to give it gas to go quicker.
After a week or two of driving around with a stick, it becomes pretty natural. You will stall it from time to time, but thats no big deal. Nothing to be intimidated about, and once you learn, you will see how much more control you have over the car.
If you have the car stopped and in first gear on flat ground, you can just slowly let the clutch out and the car will start inching forward, just like an automatic with the brakes off. From there you can learn when to give it gas to go quicker.
After a week or two of driving around with a stick, it becomes pretty natural. You will stall it from time to time, but thats no big deal. Nothing to be intimidated about, and once you learn, you will see how much more control you have over the car.
Ford does not have in its arsenal a slushbox that will both fit the S197 body and hold up to 500+ ftlbs torque. The 6060 6 speed is a VERY tight fit as it is.
It's not all that hard to learn. Find a friend willing to let you use the car to get the basics down. Then when you get yours, take it to a parking lot, or a parking garage with a slope. Practice it on the flat spots and slopes to figure out how the clutch engages and where.
If you have the car stopped and in first gear on flat ground, you can just slowly let the clutch out and the car will start inching forward, just like an automatic with the brakes off. From there you can learn when to give it gas to go quicker.
After a week or two of driving around with a stick, it becomes pretty natural. You will stall it from time to time, but thats no big deal. Nothing to be intimidated about, and once you learn, you will see how much more control you have over the car.
If you have the car stopped and in first gear on flat ground, you can just slowly let the clutch out and the car will start inching forward, just like an automatic with the brakes off. From there you can learn when to give it gas to go quicker.
After a week or two of driving around with a stick, it becomes pretty natural. You will stall it from time to time, but thats no big deal. Nothing to be intimidated about, and once you learn, you will see how much more control you have over the car.
First I got to find the friend that has a stickshift. lol Everyone around here drive auto. I might take a class to learn just to get that car!
It's not all that hard to learn. Find a friend willing to let you use the car to get the basics down. Then when you get yours, take it to a parking lot, or a parking garage with a slope. Practice it on the flat spots and slopes to figure out how the clutch engages and where.
If you have the car stopped and in first gear on flat ground, you can just slowly let the clutch out and the car will start inching forward, just like an automatic with the brakes off. From there you can learn when to give it gas to go quicker.
After a week or two of driving around with a stick, it becomes pretty natural. You will stall it from time to time, but thats no big deal. Nothing to be intimidated about, and once you learn, you will see how much more control you have over the car.
If you have the car stopped and in first gear on flat ground, you can just slowly let the clutch out and the car will start inching forward, just like an automatic with the brakes off. From there you can learn when to give it gas to go quicker.
After a week or two of driving around with a stick, it becomes pretty natural. You will stall it from time to time, but thats no big deal. Nothing to be intimidated about, and once you learn, you will see how much more control you have over the car.
Getting intimidated by the car is the worst thing to do. A common conception upon first learning.
Be with the car and listen to the car. She will tell you by response what is good to do and what is not. I drive by feel and engine sound. When using guages, I get messed up. After a time, it becomes easier to drive all other stick shift cars, even though they all vary by maker and model.
Be with the car and listen to the car. She will tell you by response what is good to do and what is not. I drive by feel and engine sound. When using guages, I get messed up. After a time, it becomes easier to drive all other stick shift cars, even though they all vary by maker and model.
Agreed. I learned manual transmission on a motorcycle, and there it is much easier to shift based on engine sound then it is to watch the tach. I find that carried over for me to the mustang. Kinda proved that when I was on a cruise locally and stalled out because I heard the stang in front of me rev instead of mine. 

What's difficult is when a big Diesel F350 Dually pulls up right next to me at a light. I cannot hear my car! Then it's by feel alone!
Talk about being a creature of habit. I ALWAYS - I mean always, back into a parking space. The Roush rear fascias will not even clear the curbs if the tires hit it. So, one day in the work garage, i decide to do the "pull through" thing. Upon doing so and realising i went just a little too far back - then decide to just pull a bit more forward and stalled her. I could not believe it! Flat ground. Thinking about it after was funny and having considered where i went wrong. Just the different approach, is what messed me up. So, now i do things various ways instead of the same methodology all the time and it helps keep me sharp. That's one of the cool things about a stick shift car.
hmmm...i don't know....
i can't drive stick either, but if i were planning on getting a gt500 i would definitely take the time to learn.
i think a car that only comes in stick means something. and having an auto version would kinda of miss the point...
i can't drive stick either, but if i were planning on getting a gt500 i would definitely take the time to learn.
i think a car that only comes in stick means something. and having an auto version would kinda of miss the point...




For that. 