Anonymous wrote:H..has location tracking and I can always see the speed. I think I can even set an alarm so my phone sounds if it goes outside a certain area, or block it from going above a certain speed. I was sort of wondering if other cars have that capacity.
Anonymous wrote:Accord or similar. Being higher up doesn't make a vehicle safer, just more prone to rolling over. And a larger vehicle that allows more passengers to ride is also not recommended.
Anonymous wrote:I gave my 17 yr old my old Cadillac SRX (v8). Built like a tank. She is 18 now and she loves that car. The extra gas is no problem (uses 91 octane). She works full-time, so she doesn't mind paying a little extra for fuel. She has been driving for years, though. She goes storm chasing during tornado season (we live in tornado alley), and that SRX can handle it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How about a suburb forester?
A Subaru would be a great, solid choice.
Anonymous wrote:Accord or similar. Being higher up doesn't make a vehicle safer, just more prone to rolling over. And a larger vehicle that allows more passengers to ride is also not recommended.
Anonymous wrote:I gave my 17 yr old my old Cadillac SRX (v8). Built like a tank. She is 18 now and she loves that car. The extra gas is no problem (uses 91 octane). She works full-time, so she doesn't mind paying a little extra for fuel. She has been driving for years, though. She goes storm chasing during tornado season (we live in tornado alley), and that SRX can handle it.
Anonymous wrote:High is bad for teens—harder to drive, easier to tip, more likely to kill someone else in a crash because where the bumper hits a pedestrian, bike rider, or a sedan.
We didn’t buy it for our teen, but our Tesla (the cheap model) has location tracking and I can always see the speed. I think I can even set an alarm so my phone sounds if it goes outside a certain area, or block it from going above a certain speed. I was sort of wondering if other cars have that capacity.