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That's another thing you learn -- that modern drivers have no understanding of the limitations of an older car. Stopping distance in a 1930s-40s car is quite different from that in a twenty-first-century car, and a safe following distance in a modern car is very dangerous in an older vehicle. In other words, no, I am not going to speed up and go bumper-to-bumper with the car in front of me.
I never saw any sense whatsoever in speeding up to a red light, or a stop sign, as I see those youngsters in those Japanese cars with the big-bore tailpipes and silly wings on the back do all the time. When I routinely drove three-on-the-tree vehicles I'd cover most of my around-town driving in second gear. Those three-speed trannies were typically situated behind engines with a lot of low-end torque, such that you could nearly come to a stop and still roll away in second gear with much complaint. This was another reason not to be in too great a hurry to get to the next signaled intersection. Putt along in second and time it such that you don't have to set foot on either the brake or clutch pedal before the light turns green.