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-   -   How not to drive your M3 (http://www.the370z.com/other-vehicles/59470-how-not-drive-your-m3.html)

Haboob 08-29-2012 12:54 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ImportConvert (Post 1889930)
Looks like he had never driven the road before and was unfamiliar with that corner/rise. Really sucks. His lesson was much more expensive than mine when I was 17 with my '95 Trans Am.

It looks like his first "clue" was at about 0:15 when he got the car light after the rise and it took more than he expected with the wheel. He didn't figure it out, and his second clue was a busted front end and blow airbags. He's still alive, and he learned (I hope) a valuable lesson, and he will laugh about it sometime, I hope, while correctly hitting the curves.

Why all the college/kid jokes? Is his age given? He looks mid/early 20's to me. It very well could be his own vehicle that he makes the note on each month/owns, without all the mommy/daddy crap. For all you know, he saved up while he was in Afghanistan, stared at M3 pictures all the time he had to himself, and that was his "coming home" gift. Just a shame he didn't know how to drive it. Or he could have been like me, and buckled down in college. Or any number of things. He may even be some rich kid who has parents with more money than brains, but I would like to think maybe not.

Because he's a Scottsdale brat thinking he can drive the roads at South Mountain (25-35mph zone I believe, with hikers and bike riders) in Daddy's M3 (or one Daddy bought for him). It's how all the Scottsdale kids are out here. They think, just because they have the car it means they can drive, regardless if they know the road.

Jsolo 08-31-2012 12:14 AM

This kid had no idea what he was doing. He's all over the road. His steering inputs are way too abrupt and he's going too fast for the road. Reminds me alot of a novice motorcycle rider who's very inconsistent with the throttle.

I've done the shifting seat position to get a better sight line on the more technical roads. From my 2 wheel days, i learned to treat the lane lines as a sort of electric fence. You never ever cross them. If you do, you're not in control and/or going too fast or beyond your skill level.

One of the comments in the video mentions he was tense. Had he been more relaxed, the blind corner might not have freaked him out as much and he might have successfully completed it. On the motorbike, being tense will always cause the bike to go wide. Being relaxed is key to not panicking. Lets hope he learned his lesson.

zguynate 08-31-2012 08:49 AM

To the question of his age the video description says he's 19.

ImportConvert 08-31-2012 10:47 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dragonbreath (Post 1895343)
To the question of his age the video description says he's 19.

I once got into a pissing match with this kid who was around that age on another forum. Long story short, I actually believe him that he did make some weird investments in the stock market. He actually owned some really nice stuff. He was an immature idiot that filmed himself almost wrecking his mustang GT to prove a point, and it got me banned, though, lol.

Came back a few years later and he was a mod on the forum with other really nice cars. Dunno if he matured up or not, but he was still alive...


...either way, betting that kid was not rolling on his own paycheck, just the odds and all...

bigaudiofanat 08-31-2012 11:26 AM

I bet daddy was not happy. Holly cow!

wstar 08-31-2012 11:30 AM

It's more difficult and improbable than you'd think to significantly raise your financial position in life above that of your parents. I pretty much default to assuming everyone's financial level in life is mostly inherited (if not directly, indirectly through the way they were raised and taught). Most rich people you meet were born rich. Some inherited it, and some just inherited the right life lessons and made it on their own. But the "rags to riches" thing is pretty insanely rare.

zguynate 08-31-2012 11:35 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ImportConvert (Post 1895548)
I once got into a pissing match with this kid who was around that age on another forum. Long story short, I actually believe him that he did make some weird investments in the stock market. He actually owned some really nice stuff. He was an immature idiot that filmed himself almost wrecking his mustang GT to prove a point, and it got me banned, though, lol.

Came back a few years later and he was a mod on the forum with other really nice cars. Dunno if he matured up or not, but he was still alive...


...either way, betting that kid was not rolling on his own paycheck, just the odds and all...

No I agree with you. You shouldnt automatically assume. I look younger than I am (I am 24) and people ask me how I afford my car and give me strange looks all the time. However when people I dont know ask me I just tell them that mommy and daddy bought it for me lol. Its easier than telling them where I work that will then just evolve into way more conversation than I care to carry.

There is a small chance, and I mean very small, that this guy bought the car with his own money. Even if dad bought it for him im not going to hate on him for it. If my dad offered me a M3 when I was 19 I sure as hell would have taken it, and probably wrecked it too lol. If anything its dads fault for giving his son a "performance" vehicle so young. Especially such an expensive one. If he tried to take responsibility for buying it himself when he didnt, then thats a different story.

Thechidz 08-31-2012 11:43 AM

well thats one way to refinance

b1adesofcha0s 08-31-2012 01:33 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dragonbreath (Post 1895619)
No I agree with you. You shouldnt automatically assume. I look younger than I am (I am 24) and people ask me how I afford my car and give me strange looks all the time. However when people I dont know ask me I just tell them that mommy and daddy bought it for me lol. Its easier than telling them where I work that will then just evolve into way more conversation than I care to carry.

There is a small chance, and I mean very small, that this guy bought the car with his own money. Even if dad bought it for him im not going to hate on him for it. If my dad offered me a M3 when I was 19 I sure as hell would have taken it, and probably wrecked it too lol. If anything its dads fault for giving his son a "performance" vehicle so young. Especially such an expensive one. If he tried to take responsibility for buying it himself when he didnt, then thats a different story.

I bought a brand new 2010 Maxima for ~$28k with my own money when I was 19. Wrecked it a couple months later and then bought my Z when I was 20. I get that look from people all the time who think my parents bought the car for me.

Davey 08-31-2012 01:34 PM

Stupid kid. :shakes head:

ImportConvert 08-31-2012 06:15 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by wstar (Post 1895608)
It's more difficult and improbable than you'd think to significantly raise your financial position in life above that of your parents. I pretty much default to assuming everyone's financial level in life is mostly inherited (if not directly, indirectly through the way they were raised and taught). Most rich people you meet were born rich. Some inherited it, and some just inherited the right life lessons and made it on their own. But the "rags to riches" thing is pretty insanely rare.

Strongly disagree. I'm far from rich, but last year I think my net income was probably +-150% of that of my most successful parent's current income (I have 4 parents, including step-parents).

It's called planning, smart work, and loving parents that helped me achieve what every parent says they want---a better life for my kid than I have.

ImportConvert 08-31-2012 06:18 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dragonbreath (Post 1895619)
No I agree with you. You shouldnt automatically assume. I look younger than I am (I am 24) and people ask me how I afford my car and give me strange looks all the time. However when people I dont know ask me I just tell them that mommy and daddy bought it for me lol. Its easier than telling them where I work that will then just evolve into way more conversation than I care to carry.

There is a small chance, and I mean very small, that this guy bought the car with his own money. Even if dad bought it for him im not going to hate on him for it. If my dad offered me a M3 when I was 19 I sure as hell would have taken it, and probably wrecked it too lol. If anything its dads fault for giving his son a "performance" vehicle so young. Especially such an expensive one. If he tried to take responsibility for buying it himself when he didnt, then thats a different story.

When I was 17, I was very jealous of my friends in highschool. They got new/cool cars (Eclipses and mustang GT's are cool when you're driving a decade-old police-car that was built in the drive-way). I thought it was "not fair".

But then I realised...their parents did the time, did the un-fun stuff, and could provide, and what idiot 17 year old says "No, dad, you keep the keys to the new mustang GT. My friends don't have cars like that, I shouldn't, either..."

Yeah...HAH!

So I made up my mind to stand on my own two feet one day and have "all the stuff that I cannot have, now."

So far, I am far from some super rich guy, but I feel content with my financial situation, and can honestly say that as of now, I feel that I am being paid what my work is worth, and am happy. That, to me, is where it's at---whether you make $10 an hour, or $250 an hour. Gotta be happy, because there is always someone richer, always someone poorer.

b1adesofcha0s 08-31-2012 06:19 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by wstar (Post 1895608)
It's more difficult and improbable than you'd think to significantly raise your financial position in life above that of your parents. I pretty much default to assuming everyone's financial level in life is mostly inherited (if not directly, indirectly through the way they were raised and taught). Most rich people you meet were born rich. Some inherited it, and some just inherited the right life lessons and made it on their own. But the "rags to riches" thing is pretty insanely rare.

Quote:

Originally Posted by ImportConvert (Post 1896359)
Strongly disagree. I'm far from rich, but last year I think my net income was probably +-150% of that of my most successful parent's current income (I have 4 parents, including step-parents).

It's called planning, smart work, and loving parents that helped me achieve what every parent says they want---a better life for my kid than I have.

I think you're both saying the same thing here.

Cmike2780 08-31-2012 06:43 PM

How he got the car doesn't really matter. It's the fact that this kid probably thinks he's the Stig after years of training on Gran Turismo. He Drives like a squid and crashed liked one. Definitely unfamiliar with the road. First mistake. Second mistake, don't race....or drive stupid unless it's something you can afford to fix.

falconfixer 08-31-2012 06:53 PM

couple things aside from what's mentioned. He's not looking 2 steps ahead of where he is at. Corner entry, scan apex shoot for exit; at the apex plan for next corner entry. Granted this is no where near a technical course but the skills could apply.

Secondly, he target fixated. Well known phenomenom that it doesn't matter what you input(his piss poor steering inputs) if you fixate on a taget you will hit it.


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