goat2 wrote: » I had the lend of a family members old car about 6 mths ago, was doing great until the camera van came into view, I looked at clock and thought I was under the speed limit, but the penny dropped a half an hour later when I realised I had been reading MPH and not KPH, anyway I got caught speeding, It can catch one out
GarIT wrote: » A sticker over the glass would obscure the needle. Someone nervous and just starting to drive shouldn't have to be having to do maths while learning. I'd see it no different to the instructor showing up in a left hand drive car. Sure it works the same but it's not made for Irish roads and it's an unnecessary complication.
Del2005 wrote: » You know the original is just a sticker on a panel inside the glass. What difference does it matter where the sticker is once it's accurate? A refund FFS!
GarIT wrote: » I don't know anything about getting it done but for someone taking driving lessons anything other than the main original measurement being in Km/h would be totally unacceptable. I'd want a refund. A sticker wouldn't be good enough.
newmember? wrote: » What are you on? Totally OT but millennials are people born since the millennium
zilog_jones wrote: » ...Most definitions of Millennials puts them at around 20-35 years old now, so they mostly already went through the Euro changeover. Kids these days aren't Millennials
bazz26 wrote: » God help us if we ever had to switch to another currency, how would the millennials cope?
Old Gill wrote: » I'm interested in importing a car from the UK but would prefer the speedometer in KM (as I'm a driving instructor and it's easier for pupils).
Old Gill wrote: » I'm interested in importing a car from the UK but would prefer the speedometer in KM (as I'm a driving instructor and it's easier for pupils). Is changing the speedometer clock on the dashboard a big issue or would the cost negate any savings made importing?