Long story short: I’m (24M) American, and I’m visiting my long-distance Romanian boyfriend for the first time soon. In Romania, most cars are manual - including all the ones owned by my boyfriend’s family (I’ll be staying with them). I’ve never driven a manual before. His dad told me he can give me a quick lesson, and that I’m welcome to use their cars if I want; otherwise, I can rent an automatic. I don’t have access to any manual cars here in the U.S. to practice on, so I’m not sure what to do.

  • thebestaquaman@lemmy.world
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    19 hours ago

    For that exact reason some countries (my country included) don’t accept an American license unless you do a test here first.

    Though IIRC, that applies for both manuals and automatics, because American drivers education isn’t really trusted here.

    • 0ops@lemm.ee
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      1 minute ago

      That is totally fair because I literally, and I mean literally, drove around the block for my American driver’s test. My entire test:

      K start the car and turn right out of the parking lot onto the street

      Turn right at the stop

      Turn right at the stop

      Parallel park right there

      Pull back onto the road

      Turn right at the stop

      Turn right at the stop

      Turn right into the DMV parking lot and park anywhere

      Congratulations, you passed!

      This was in a residential area too, so I never went above 25mph/40kph

    • bdonvr@thelemmy.club
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      16 hours ago

      With the Geneva convention on Road Traffic they must recognize it, at least for visitors. However you are probably right if OP tried to move there and get a local license, they’d need to retest.