SL55/63/65/R230 AMG: Kids with SL55s? I thought my C32 was cool..

So what hard work did your unemployed significant others do in life to have high end cars thrown their direction?
So what hard work did your unemployed significant others do in life to have high end cars thrown their direction?
The Best of Mercedes & AMG
So what hard work did your unemployed significant others do in life to have high end cars thrown their direction?
When I was 18.....considering the way I drove....and if I had a 55 at the time, I likely would have killed about 10 people driving. That would be in the first month of ownership alone.
Besides that, I think it makes them lazy. When I was in high school (late 90's) the nicer cars were new Camaros, Mustangs, etc. These were kids whose parents owned companies, these just happened to be the "in" cars back then. I see them now and they have similar cars.....they were spoiled back then but I think that hurt them after school because they don't seem to be any better off now car-wise.
I had a POS $1800 1989 Grand Am as my first car.
Last edited by mjr24; Feb 21, 2008 at 11:00 AM.
So what hard work did your unemployed significant others do in life to have high end cars thrown their direction?
So what hard work did your unemployed significant others do in life to have high end cars thrown their direction?
Maturity is the factor for me, if you haven't heard an 18 year old kid in Florida killed himself and 4 of his friends in an M5 a few weeks ago.
Having to work for something while you're young establishes a good work ethic. Why would you want to work or do anything significant with your life if everything was handed to you on a gold platter?
Last edited by Cyrusx7; Feb 21, 2008 at 07:19 PM.
http://www.wreckedexotics.com/slr/sl...0129_001.shtml
Remembering the way I used to drive at 16, I am amazed that I've made it to Senior Discount status today.
I wrecked my first car at least 3 or 4 times by the time I graduated HS, and then moved away to college with a brand new '64 GTO 389 Tri-Power Coupe with 4:10 gears that was crushed by a runaway cement truck while it was parked on a street in 1967. Man, I thought that GTO was the fastest accelerating thing in the whole world at the time .... but then again, I was just a dumb-*** kid that didn't know anything about the real world beyond my home town and my engineering college campus. Unfortunately there was no internet, cable TV, personal computers, personal music players, or small hand calculators back then ..... no wonder my head always hurt with all that thinking I had to do (like using paper/pencils or slide-rules and listening to music in scratchy vinyl mono)
But I was young, stupid and generally happy ..... thought I would live forever, etc (a standard normal young kid thing).
That all changed however after my first steam catapult launch in a fully armed F-4J Phantom jet off the coast of Vietnam in the very early 70's. Being hurled from 0-175 knots (199 mph) in just a tick under 4 seconds into an uncertain future was always sweaty palms adrenalin rush ..... an experience that unfortunately has left me emotionally disabled in that I've never since achived any true driving fulfillment (like when I was a kid) regardless of all the makes and models of automobiles I've sampled over the last 30+ years while working in the oil patch around the world.
So I say again, let the kids have their thrills now while they are still young enough to enjoy them (assuming of course that we all have kids enough to spare so that losing one or two won't matter that much to us)
Last edited by RRod; Feb 22, 2008 at 03:20 PM.
+1. Responsible or not, the temptation to kill myself in a high performance automobile would have been too great. I drove a Mustang GT in college and that car took me to the dark side on many occasions. Someone was looking over me.
Not until they graduate from college.(which should be around 22y/o or so)
Only then will I truly trust their judgment.
I damn near killed myself in a car with barely 250hp doing dumb s*h*i*t* cause I had no one else in the car watching me.
Its too tempting. Especially when the friends are around.
you pay to clothe, feed, and educate them, and teach them right from wrong. if you've brought them up to expect (and get) a new car for getting good grades in high school, or for ANY reason for that matter, good luck.
My kid's first car will be worth whatever money he earns from his summer job before he gets his license, plus double that amount from me. he'll learn to do oil changes, tune-ups, etc., and then i'll help him upgrade from there. no person who has never had a real job deserves a brand new car, no matter how well they did in 11th grade social studies.
Kinda like a 12 year old wearing an outfit that looks like Dr Troy from Nip Tuck instead of a t-shirt and skater shorts. Just doesn't look appropriate.
I actually broke the lease early because I bought a new car and couldn't wait. I love paying for my own things; makes me feel more responsible and more deserving I guess.
And also, keep in mind over the 3 years I had the CLK, I put in over $20k worth of mods...enough that I could have leased the car myself. By having my dad get me a nice car as a first car, it motivated me to work hard so that I wouldn't go backwards and get a lesser car (not that car = sucess, but I am a car guy and I could never drive an "average" or even plain "nice" car).








