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Astral Driving School »
Driving Test Preparation »
Driving Test Centre Protocols
Driving Test Centre Protocols
Driving Test centres are private property, sometimes Government owned and sometimes not. Where a custom built Test Centre is in operation you are not permitted to enter the grounds to check out the situation or to practise. In fact on the notice boards in Test Centres you will find explicit requests not to be practising on Test Routes during the normal hours that Test are being conducted. This is primarily aimed at Driving Instructors many of whom like to while away the hours with their pupils going round and round Test routes. It is a free country and providing your vehicle and license are in order then it is perfectly acceptable to get to know the local area where Tests take place. It is not always possible to practise out side normal Driving Test times. So if you are practising during the day on Driving Test routes there are certain protocols that should be observed. A Driving Instructor should know these and pass them on to pupils who may be practising in their own cars. (1) You don’t park or practise parking in the Driving Test Centre car park! (2) You don’t drive past the Test candidates cars when it’s obvious that a test is commencing or completing. (3) You don’t practise the Under the Bonnet Technical checks in or near a Test Centre car park. Do these Technical checks with your Driving Instructor well away from the Driving Test Centre itself. (4) If you have been shown certain favourite spots for specific Driving Test manoeuvres by your Driving Instructor then take very great care not to be practising these techniques at these locations during Test times. We frequently see Learner Drivers camped out at Driving Test manoeuvre locations chatting with friends and generally making a nuisance of them selves (5) By all means tackle these reversing manoeuvres after hours on Driving Test routes but choose as many as five or six different other locations for perfecting these techniques. Practise at more difficult locations will equip you with the necessary skills to pass the Driving Test providing you DO practise. Doing a manoeuvre two or three times just won’t be anything like enough .Twenty or thirty times would be more appropriate! One of the most valuable aspects or preparing for your Driving Test is to visit the chosen Driving Test Centre on different days of the week and at different times of day .You will then become acquainted with the changing traffic flows and volume and you can get a good idea of what you can expect on your particular Test Day and time. Reducing the number of surprises that you might face on your Driving Test will give you a substantial edge and stack the cards in your favour. Things to watch out for in the vicinity of a Driving Test Centre are major road or building works; new road layouts, especially those incorporating Traffic lights and road resurfacing. All of these different scenarios will present the Learner Driver with substantial difficulties that will have to be dealt with very efficiently and safely if the Examiner is to be satisfied. One final note to aspiring Driving Test Candidates and that is despite the lengthy delays in getting a Driving Test appointment it is not at all advisable to apply for a Test the other side of the country. Some less populated areas have a shorter Driving Test waiting list but unless you can take a couple of weeks holiday in a particular area to practise, having lessons with a local Instructor, there will not be enough time for you to familiarise yourself with all of the above hints and tips. You would have to be an exceptional Driver to pass a Driving Test in an area that you are completely unfamiliar with. Join the Mailing List and Receive YourFree 7-Part Mini-Course on Passing The Test! (c) Astral Driving School. Limerick 2006 |
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Page last updated: 22/01/2007
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