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-   -   Tw@tting kids (https://www.scoobynet.com/non-scooby-related-4/986470-tw-tting-kids.html)

Busterbulldog 29 September 2013 11:26 AM

Tw@tting kids
 
Well like a prick I insured my almost 21 year old son on my Freelander td4 to give him some independence. I knew straight away it was a mistake but you gotta try I guess. In about 4 months he has reversed into a trailer and torn the rear bumper,shattered the rear window,bent the edge of drivers door hitting a wall I assume,ruined the clutch,broke the glovebox and the radio and a fecking electric window, and now the ****ing prick has driven it into our own driveway gates wrecking the door,quarter panel B post etc cracked the gate pillar and broken my electric gates.
I been away for the weekend motorhoming got a text off him saying your gonna kill me...drove home no sign of him Landrover left in garden keys left and the wheel arch left balancing somehow on the dents...Im ****ing fuming.

RA Dunk 29 September 2013 11:38 AM

Hmmmm, a few wee accidents fair enough boys will be boys and all that, but he clearly isnt giving a flying fcuk, this is what happens when things are handed to you.

Remove him from your insurance, let him pay for his own car and his own insurance and see if he still has the couldn't give a fcuk mentality.

Jamz3k 29 September 2013 11:39 AM

Your kid sounds like a knob. I hope you won't be paying the repair bills.

I always thought my parents were a bit cuntish but they had the right idea. I got a car when I could afford to buy it, insure it and run it. I appreciate my wheels because of years of walking home in the ****ty winters and being at the mercy of public transport.

BULLITT 29 September 2013 11:39 AM

And make him pay for the damage already done.

*matthewturb2000* 29 September 2013 12:27 PM

Lol I feel I've got this to come in a few years lol get hima banger, a metro or mk3 fiesta for 200£ and let him drive into what he wants , from the sounds of it your td4s a banger now let him have that..... Harsh story though mate not a nice way to get home.
I gotta admit I crashed into my dad's house and wrote off his 3ltr senator but I stayed to take the heat (this was many years ago before I had a lisence and was doing a burn out on my drive at 15 ish, why I thought it would be a good idea I do not know) that was the worst thing I ever did as a youth, but I paid for it doing work in the garden lol

toneh 29 September 2013 12:43 PM

It seems more like a don't give a f*ck attitude rather than genuine accidents
And after the first couple of incidents I would have been looking at canceling the insurance
You've really only got yourself to blame for letting him keep getting away with it
The term " spoilt brat " springs to mind I'm afraid

alcazar 29 September 2013 12:58 PM

Does look like it.

If he isn't paying for the repairs, or the insurance, why should he care?

lovinmescoob 29 September 2013 02:48 PM


Originally Posted by Busterbulldog (Post 11221629)
Well like a prick I insured my almost 21 year old son on my Freelander td4 to give him some independence. I knew straight away it was a mistake but you gotta try I guess. In about 4 months he has reversed into a trailer and torn the rear bumper,shattered the rear window,bent the edge of drivers door hitting a wall I assume,ruined the clutch,broke the glovebox and the radio and a fecking electric window, and now the ****ing prick has driven it into our own driveway gates wrecking the door,quarter panel B post etc cracked the gate pillar and broken my electric gates.
I been away for the weekend motorhoming got a text off him saying your gonna kill me...drove home no sign of him Landrover left in garden keys left and the wheel arch left balancing somehow on the dents...Im ****ing fuming.

I'm not surprised your fuming!!! Has he actually passed his test yet?:wonder:

Chip 29 September 2013 02:55 PM


Originally Posted by RA Dunk (Post 11221641)
Hmmmm, a few wee accidents fair enough boys will be boys and all that, but he clearly isnt giving a flying fcuk, this is what happens when things are handed to you.

Remove him from your insurance, let him pay for his own car and his own insurance and see if he still has the couldn't give a fcuk mentality.

Yep!

Wish 29 September 2013 03:07 PM

We are doing the opposite. We are buying our son a brand new car, making him pay for the insurance. We hope that being new he will look after it and if crashed will have the latest technology for saftey.

Feel your pain.

toneh 29 September 2013 03:43 PM

Has the world gone feckin mad
Insuring your kids cars , buying em new cars
Don't get me wrong I'm all for seeing that kids are looked after
But we are talking about young adults
Why can't they work and earn there own money and buy a car
And if they can't , tough , wait until they can
No wonder we have a generation that's work shy and think the world owes them a living:rolleyes:

*matthewturb2000* 29 September 2013 03:45 PM

the job center doesnt pay enough lol

toneh 29 September 2013 03:59 PM

I would throw the theory out about buying kids a new car because they are less likely to crash , right out the window
It's possible it will cause more problems

"Hey it's new so I'm safer " er not really
" no way " "I'm not having an old corsa over taking me"
" they're soft and love me, I'm sure they'll get me another if it gets broke/smashed"
" I'll just tell em it wasn't my fault "

Qwertyco 29 September 2013 04:20 PM


Originally Posted by Wish (Post 11221766)
We are doing the opposite. We are buying our son a brand new car, making him pay for the insurance. We hope that being new he will look after it and if crashed will have the latest technology for saftey.

Feel your pain.

IF crashed,
don't you mean
WHEN crashed ?

:facepalm:

Wish 29 September 2013 04:25 PM

When, if ..... Makes no difference it's only metal.
I never said he was less likely to crash it. I said it would have the latest technology if crashed.

The car is incidental ...... It's the person inside I care about.

LSherratt 29 September 2013 04:47 PM

How can your son be such a sh1te driver? No wonder insurance for younger people is so expensive!

Matteeboy 29 September 2013 04:56 PM

I had to work to pay for my lessons then save to buy a car which took forever.

I'm sure many here are similar?

jonc 29 September 2013 04:57 PM

I blame the parents. :lol1:

tony de wonderful 29 September 2013 05:03 PM


Originally Posted by toneh (Post 11221787)
Has the world gone feckin mad
Insuring your kids cars , buying em new cars
Don't get me wrong I'm all for seeing that kids are looked after
But we are talking about young adults
Why can't they work and earn there own money and buy a car
And if they can't , tough , wait until they can
No wonder we have a generation that's work shy and think the world owes them a living:rolleyes:

Back in the day in 6th form I don't remember any of my peer group being bought new cars. I think one mate may have had an old panda bought for him, but he had to insure it IIRC, another inherited an old Datsun from his granddad. Cars were costly to run and those who had cars available were in a sizable minority.

An aquintance in the year above was killed when he crashed his car into a tree, and his passenger suffered a brain injury. There were quite a few car wrecks when were say 17 to 21...a bad age group for risk taking.

I never owned a car then lol. I didn't get a car until my late 20's.

Turbohot 29 September 2013 05:27 PM


Originally Posted by Wish (Post 11221837)
The car is incidental ...... It's the person inside I care about.

Same here. I'd add some care for the person/animal outside the car as well.

I bought my son his first car, and he bought his insurance himself. He did have a job, so he paid for fuel, services etc. himself. In its early days he pulled out like a turnip while driving downhill and caused a small dent on some other car, but no one was hurt. He and his car were fine, but he had to borrow money from his dad to pay for other car's repair. He paid back to his dad in 3 instalments. He has recently bought his second car with his dad (both went halves on it), and they'll work something out when it comes to expenses. His dad also wants the luxury of driving a soft top Mazda MX5 :lol1:, so he had to pay half.

Dad bought our daughter dear her first Corsa (a cousin's reject) that she hated, and hardly drove. It ended up being re-sold. She isn't interested in getting a car for herself atm, and we aren't going to get her another one, either. She'll have to pay for all of it, when she can afford to.

I did look into insuring my kids on my cars, but I was told not to do so. Scooby would have been out of question. Other cars with powerful engines were not right either with the cost of insurance for young drivers. It would have also caused inconvenience if they had crashed them here n' there. Best idea is to buy them another car which they can afford to crash. Don't insure them on your expensive cars, and the cars that you use for work. If it's some banger on the side, go for it. But not your good car.

toneh 29 September 2013 05:41 PM

There was a case of a young lad on a forum in the states a few years back asking " how to max out an m5
Shortly after there were reports of fatalities involving an m5
Him and his mates in the car had been killed
Iirc it was his dads
If ever there was a reason not to have a youngster on your insurance for a powerful car this is it

Busterbulldog 29 September 2013 06:13 PM

Dull head here paid for all his lessons test etc,your all right he appreciates **** all...he has sat on his arse in the house whilst his mother and I started to repair the gates,then dismantle the interior to try and bosh out the dents.Ive boshed them out quite badly and hammerited the damage and siliconed the wing trim back on...also noticed a bent front panel radiator and some other damage...although he knows nothing of it of course. Lesson learnt he can ****ing walk now.
fkin kids

http://i930.photobucket.com/albums/a...psb2c6b517.jpg

http://i930.photobucket.com/albums/a...ps90280475.jpg


http://i930.photobucket.com/albums/a...psaa1cee47.jpg

Blue by You 29 September 2013 06:33 PM

Try to look on the bright side mate, at least your lad hasn't hurt anyone and isn't a casualty himself, and hopefully will come to his senses and appreciate what you have tried to do for him.
In the meantime let him walk! :D

Turbohot 29 September 2013 06:39 PM


Originally Posted by Blue by You (Post 11221945)
Try to look on the bright side mate, at least your lad hasn't hurt anyone and isn't a casualty himself...

Agree.

Lessons and tests make good gifts for 17th and 18th birthdays. After they have acquired their proper licence, parents at the most should buy them a cheap, small engine car with modern safety features for their 19th, and let them afford fuel and upcoming bills themselves.

Regret no more, Buster. What's happened has happened. At least the boy is ok. Now take him off your insurance, and tell him to get a car for himself when he can afford it. If his mummy feels a bit sorry for him, get a small engine cheapo runabout for him with nort to sixty in 3 days, but that's only if he can afford to run it. Tell him to get a job if he wants to run a car.

Snooky 29 September 2013 07:35 PM

Good luck!!
my first car bought for me and on my parents insurance I wrote off hitting another car! No one hurt but I got a good ass kicking! Made me learn quick from then on I had to fund everything myself! Still at 25 I can't afford a subaru turbo because of my faults and points but you learn from your errors!! So I chug along in a sport for the time being!!

mrmadcap 29 September 2013 07:42 PM

Isn't having a young person on your insurance illegal?

Busterbulldog 29 September 2013 09:40 PM


Originally Posted by Turbohot (Post 11221954)
Agree.

Lessons and tests make good gifts for 17th and 18th birthdays. After they have acquired their proper licence, parents at the most should buy them a cheap, small engine car with modern safety features for their 19th, and let them afford fuel and upcoming bills themselves.

Regret no more, Buster. What's happened has happened. At least the boy is ok. Now take him off your insurance, and tell him to get a car for himself when he can afford it. If his mummy feels a bit sorry for him, get a small engine cheapo runabout for him with nort to sixty in 3 days, but that's only if he can afford to run it. Tell him to get a job if he wants to run a car.

Mummy hates him atm ,I bought the Freelander for her,to save her using the best car as a runaround.

Busterbulldog 29 September 2013 09:42 PM


Originally Posted by mrmadcap (Post 11222023)
Isn't having a young person on your insurance illegal?

In what way? I insured him for work business and pleasure all bases covered no lieing ,no fronting, myself my wife and another employee are also insured to drive it.

lordharding 29 September 2013 09:47 PM

I paid for the boys driving lesson and he passed first time in ten weeks
I taught him to drive off road when he was 13

My parents gave him their old rover which he pranged form end one. Night
New wing and headlamp from scrappie and polished out the dents best we could do was not amused
He then went through a clutch and somehow manged to smash a gear box whic we weren't pleased about but he settled down and then we bought him a brand new corsa 1litre when he was 18 which ended up woth full bodykit on and was real show car
That sort of taught him too look after it as all his money went in modifications. Etc

When he was 21 we helped out for the 350z whic he kept for 4 years and again no spills or speeding fines etc so he matured I to a sensible lad
He is in Australia now and again we had to help him but a Suzuki swift but he has paid us back now but then hints are dropping for more cash for a house as his residential is coming through so no dout the bank of parents again but i will get it back when I live out there at his expense for 6 months of the year when I retire in a few years time :D

Kids
Well your only here once so you might as well do the best you can for them

tarmac terror 29 September 2013 10:00 PM

I think if he was my son, I would be driving him everywhere, mainly because he would be incapable of walking.

It is something which pisses me of about the UK driving test, perfect a couple of basic manoeuvres and demonstrate the most basic concepts of car control and you are handed the keys to a lethal weapon, then sent out into the streets to play with it.

You're money, your car, your son and ultimately your choice, but I would be putting him though a series of assessed drives to ascertain whether he is actually capable of driving to the required standard, for his safety and that of others. Remember his lessons only taught him how to pass a test, I bet they didn't even cover the basics of reversing into a bay between parked cars.


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