Want to learn to drive a truck? At Convoy in the Park you can sample one of the hardest parts of the driving test: the reverse manoeuvre. Here’s how George Barrow got on with his C licence training, courtesy Scania.
Driving in London is often best summed up with a cartoon-like image of an angry, fist-waving, horn-tooting maniac, but despite being a London driver I wouldn’t class myself as an aggressive one. In fact, I would describe my driving style as the polar opposite of that caricature, usually.
Yet when I arrived for my first day of HGV training and Eddie asked me to score my own driving out of 10 – “Two,” I joked – a look of panic crossed his face. “Really?” he probed.
“Well, I drive a van in London, mostly at rush-hour and only ever in first or second gear. I’m definitely not a bad driver, I just probably couldn’t pass my driving test again.”
His response was unprintable, but as a former native of Millwall, south-east London, and one-time Routemaster bus driver, he knew what I meant by my approach to driving. Despite telling myself, as I travelled to Scania’s UK headquarters and driver training centre in Milton Keynes, that I was just learning to drive a really big van, the challenge of driving a truck was always going to be on a different level.
Preparation
In order to reach the training stage there are a few administrative hoops to jump through. Having a clean bill of health is unsurprisingly a requirement, so months earlier I’d had my personal MoT and submitted my licence to the DVLA to update my entitlements. Training centres can often arrange a medical on site or nearby if you haven’t already had one.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der August 2017-Ausgabe von Truck & Driver.
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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der August 2017-Ausgabe von Truck & Driver.
Starten Sie Ihre 7-tägige kostenlose Testversion von Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierte Premium-Storys sowie über 8.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
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Well forked Daf
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Time Machine 2015-2019
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Original and best
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A Cutt Above
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