I see people dissing me. Well you know people. I've never ever had any interest in cars. Nor have I had any experience. How am I supposed to know they are called Gauge? I've only had 90 minutes of experience on Cars.
For the record, I am not dissing you. I am, however,
concerned for you, and the reason is the way you're describing your driving experience. Having trouble shifting doesn't bother me - everybody has trouble shifting at first. Not knowing what stuff is called doesn't bother me - it's just vocabulary, you know?
What bothers me is that you seem to be doing things - such as pushing in the clutch, such as using one foot for certain pedals and the other for the other pedal - without actually knowing why you're doing them.
I could be absolutely wrong of course, but that's kind of how it sounds, and it worries me, OK? I don't want you to hurt yourself, your car or anybody else.
The question is though. How do I know when enough is enough? When it comes to accelerating I know because the car is moving. How ever when I'm told vague terms like press the clutch or get off the clutch slowly to get the car moving. It doesn't help. Anything I should look out for like engine noise?
Exactly how much you push the clutch in varies a bit from car to car. But on most cars, you basically push the clutch until it's fairly close to the floorboard. You shouldn't have to bear down really hard on the pedal, but you should press it nearly all the way down.
There is a very easy and obvious way to tell if you have the clutch fully engaged: That's if your gearshift slips easily from one gear to the next. If it won't go from first to second, for example, it's easy - just push the clutch down farther until it will let you shift. It's really that easy. You can actually slip the car out of gear without pressing in the clutch, though that's not the best way, but you can't shift it back into gear unless the clutch is fully engaged.
As for how slowly to let up on the clutch, that is something that can't be described with mere text on a screen, you know? That's what you're going to have to learn there in the parking lot or driving around the block. Basically, you let up on the clutch at the same time you give the car gas. When you do it correctly - and this will simply take practice - the car changes gears smoothly. When you do it incorrectly, either the car judders and complains and sometimes the engine dies (this means you didn't give it enough gas); or the engine winds out and the car gives a leap forward and also sometimes the engine dies (this means you gave it too much gas).
But no matter how awful that feels, it isn't the end of the world, I promise. The car can't take this treatment indefinitely, but it can take it for a while. You're just going to have to get a feel for it.
If one of the gauges is a tachometer, it will tell you how many RPM (revolutions per minute) the engine is turning at - the higher the number, the faster the engine is going. However, you should be able to tell if the engine is turning fast or slow just by the sound.
I have been driving for a long time, but I remember exactly what it felt like to learn to drive a manual. Exactly. I remember I had to learn in just a couple of days because my mother and I needed to go on a long road trip and I needed to be able to take my turn driving. So I learned to drive her manual. Really, it's not that hard.
But I do think, unless your lessons are going a little more smoothly than you're describing here, that you are picking up some bad habits that you're going to need to unlearn. So really, you might want to consider again a couple of driving lessons. Really.
I mean, you're going to have to get out of second gear pretty darn soon - I am a little concerned that you seem to be spending so much time in first gear, to be honest.