|
Support for Car Talk is provided by:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Dear Tom and Ray:
I, along with about 20 friends, am determined to go to the Burning
Tom: Bad idea, Raz. First of all, most states -- including Washington -- require you to have a commercial license to drive a school bus. But more importantly, school buses are among the least-safe vehicles on the road. Ray: They're designed for slow-speed, short, local trips with lots of stops and starts. They steer terribly, brake terribly, corner terribly, and most of them don't have seat belts. Not to mention air conditioning! Tom: So, as romantic as that idea might seem, I'd suggest one of two alternative approaches. The first would be to go in two 15-passenger vans. While they're not the safest vehicles either, they are a huge step up from school buses. They require no special license, they have basic safety equipment, and they handle somewhat more like cars than like trucks. Ray: Plus, they offer two other great advantages. One is that when certain people start to hate each other, they can travel in separate vans for a while, until they make new enemies. Tom: And second, when one of the vans breaks down, the other can always go for help. Ray: The other option, which I like even better, is to charter a bus. If you call around and negotiate a bit, for a few hundred dollars per person you can get a bus that will take you there, wait for you and then bring you back. And the buses you charter are plush compared with a van or school bus, with airplane-style reclining seats, a sound system and even TV monitors Tom: Plus, they come with two things that 15-passenger vans don't have. One, a professional driver. So you guys can sit back and enjoy the trip, and not worry about being awake enough or clear-headed enough to drive. Ray: And the other key feature is a bathroom, which shouldn't be
underestimated when 20 people are crossing three or four states. Have
a safe trip, Raz.
© 2003 by Tom and Ray Magliozzi and Doug Berman Distributed by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
Get your question answered. |
You can save thousands of dollars by buying a late-model used car. But how do you separate the cream puffs from the heaps? Tom and Ray's booklet takes you step by step through the process: "How to Buy a Great Used Car: Secrets Only Your Mechanic Knows." Send $4.50 (check or money order) to Used Car, P.O. Box 536475, Orlando, FL 32853-6475, or buy all of Tom and Ray's booklets online.