Regulate Speed Of Ws6 For My Son
That way you can change it and make it unlimited again if you like without sending anything back.
PM or call me and i can give you some more information on it.
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anytime I drop my car off anywhere.... I flash it so it can't rev above 3k RPM , and can't exceed 15mph
This is wrong on sooo many levels. Necessary, but wrong. My son Bret, who posted here for a time as SStrokerAce (but that's another story), is a very aggressive driver and also an aggresive person. When he turned 16 I was very worried about his survival in a vehicle. Many (most?) vehicle accidents can be avoided if the driver knows what to do...or not do. You don't learn that from Operator Ed (I can't call it Driver Ed with a straight face), you learn from instruction and practice. Self-taught driving is like self-taught flying of fighter jets...it rarely works, and we lose lots of lives and equipment that way.
My suggestion is that you spend the first $1600 or so on a high-performance Driving School offered by folks like Skip Barber.
http://www.skipbarber.com/driving_sc...hp_school.aspx
This will teach your son how to handle a car correctly in all of those conditions he will (not may) encounter. He will practice the correct techniques rather than invent them at the time of the first OOPS! which might be the last. It will increase his chances of survival by 10 or 100 times. Better yet, take the course with him. We did that. We waited a few years, but if I were in the same situation again, I'd take him there as soon as he got his license. It's better to learn the right thing to do than to unlearn bad habits.
Prior to my son's birth I instructed in USAF single-seat fighters. Instruction is done from a second aircraft over a radio: you can't grab the controls to save the student's aircraft. The instructor learns how to communicate techniques, actions, etc. required to perform a maneuver or handle an emergency. This came in handy for Bret's first year of driving with me in the right seat. We did about 10,000 miles of "dual" before he soloed. During that time we practiced normal drivng and abnormal driving. Full on dry-road antilock braking form 75 mph with lane changes was involved. So was excessive speeding. It's going to happen, probably on the first solo. My thought was better with an instructor along checking traffic, hazards, etc. than "alone, unarmed and unafraid". So he got to drive over 100 or maybe it was 120, relatively safely to satisfy himself (and probably his buddies).
I seriously doubt Bret would have survived without help from "Uncle Skip" as he calls his Barber experiences (he took the open wheel racing course later on), and perhaps without his 10000 mile so "dual".
You won't like this, but a WS6 is the absolute wrong car for a new, unschooled driver. He can get into more serious car control trouble below 80 than you can imagine, and it will happen quicker than in a less-quick vehicle. Bret started in a Saturn and didn't get into a Camaro SS until much later (after college when he could afford it). He now autocrosses that car, and riding with him on course is a real g-trip., or E-Tcket ride if you are an old Disney fan.
Unless you understand what C-P-R means in car control, "turn-in" "apex" and "track out" and can teach it effectively, my strongest recommendation is to get your son to "Uncle Skip" or another similar drivng school. It WILL save his life, and maybe a few others.
It was the best money we ever spent on our son!
Jon
I'll PM you my cell # if your interested, Im located in Bedford about 15min from downtown. Oh yea im cheap too.


