Fridashy_small
Reputation: 49

Best Place to Teach a Manual Transmission in Seattle?

I love teaching my friends & family to drive a manual transmission (my Honda has taken a lot of abuse in stride). I now live on First Hill and want to carry on this beautiful tradition. Does anyone know of a place nearby that is large and sparse and flat enough to learn the basics, followed by another place nearby that is long and sparse and steep enough to learn the art of shifting into first gear on a hill?

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  • Avatar_default
    Reputation: 831

    The big parking lot in between Hec Ed and U Village. If there's not a game or something going on it's a big wide area of empty pavement, which is a great spot to get comfortable with the clutch. Then you can head west into the little side-streets in the U, which are hilly as heck but slow and usually not too busy.

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  • Willie_small
    Reputation: 32

    I just learned a few weeks ago on back roads in south king county. While that's probably a bit far for you to go, I'd definitely get out of the city. Too many distractions for driving a stick for the first time.

    If you really don't want to go very far, try to find a big empty parking lot. Preferably the top of a multi-level parking garage, where there's only one place cars can go in and out of. If it's well-lit, nighttime might be better, since there are less cars around. And you can even practice hill driving going up to the top level! (I work in Bellevue, and the Bel Square parking garage would be *awesome* for this. It's mostly empty at night)

    Best of luck. Now that I know how, I definitely prefer driving a manual transmission, and am thankful there are people like you around to teach people like me =)

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  • Img_3380_small
    Reputation: 3752

    I personally think somewhere like the parking lot at Home Depot on Aurora, and then cruising the nearby streets until comfortable, then hitting Aurora for a freeway-like experience. Kind of an all-in-one deal.

    When I learned I first drove in parking lots until I could actually go without stalling. From there it was the small side roads around our house, and my step dad did the hills with me. REALLY awesome- he'd have his hand on the emergency break so if I didn't catch the clutch right away and started rolling I wouldn't panic. I picked it up almost immediately because I wasn't nervous.

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