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#438845 - 10/07/08 03:42 AM
Re: Has Ford gone over the edge? MyKey
[Re: CJS]
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Nautical Alchemy
Admiral
Registered: 01/14/03
Posts: 11513
Loc: Battle Creek/Grand Haven, MI
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Or if you have a kid that gets a bunch of speeding tickets, it would have prevented high insurance (who, the kid going to pay for it?), bad credit, and so on.
I have some advice for you parents with kids still in their teens. And I am sure anyone with adult kids will agree with me.
Regardless of how well you bring your kids up, how responsible you teach them to be, all kids tend to go through a period of rebellion. This might be in their early or late teens, or at least hopefully before adult hood - but sometimes it happens then as well.
As they will generally turn out OK as they get older, but there will be a point where I think it is the "rite-of-adulthood" that your kids will go through a period of I know everything, I can do anything I want, etc. But then, they get into the "real-world" where they actually have to support themselves in life, and then decide; maybe dad wasn't so dumb afterall.
But it will pass.
I suppose if I had one of those gadgets for my vehicle when my kids went through that period, yea, I'd use it. But I would like to also have a shutoff on the vehicle so that you could not use the cell phone at the same time as driving the car.
_________________________
"Yesterday's Dreams"1995 Carver 325 Aft Cabin  Posts are amateur opinion only. You assume all responsibility for any action you take as a result of reading my posts.
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#438912 - 10/07/08 10:53 AM
Re: Has Ford gone over the edge? MyKey
[Re: Cycleboater]
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Admiral
Registered: 01/20/03
Posts: 3964
Loc: Stillwater, OK
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The limiter is set at 80 mph, so that is not any big deal. But it may save on insurance and be worth it. Every kid I knew growing up, was fully aware of the top speed of Dad's car. My Mom's car could do over 140 mph. (65 Fury III, 383 HiPo). I mostly drove the 62 Ford station wagon with the 352 base engine we called the tank. The new system allows the parents to set a speed limit of 45, 55, or 65 mph, but it only blinks at you if you go over. It also can be more insistant about not buckling up.
What the kids will really dread is when there is a little black box that tracks data for the parents like speeds, g-forces, passenger number and activities, cell phone use, and numerous other features.
I think that we could also see a feature mandated in new cars that would force you to plug your cell phone into a handsfree system before it can communicate outside the vehicle. That would be a real can of worms.
_________________________
03 Crestliner 2485 LSi 4.3 MPI 63 Newman 15' 01 Dakota Quad Cab 4.7L 08 Taurus
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#438973 - 10/07/08 04:46 PM
Re: Has Ford gone over the edge? MyKey
[Re: Al]
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Admiral
Registered: 01/17/03
Posts: 2267
Loc: Indianapolis, IN.
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Or if you have a kid that gets a bunch of speeding tickets, it would have prevented high insurance (who, the kid going to pay for it?), bad credit, and so on.
I have some advice for you parents with kids still in their teens. And I am sure anyone with adult kids will agree with me.
Regardless of how well you bring your kids up, how responsible you teach them to be, all kids tend to go through a period of rebellion. This might be in their early or late teens, or at least hopefully before adult hood - but sometimes it happens then as well.
As they will generally turn out OK as they get older, but there will be a point where I think it is the "rite-of-adulthood" that your kids will go through a period of I know everything, I can do anything I want, etc. But then, they get into the "real-world" where they actually have to support themselves in life, and then decide; maybe dad wasn't so dumb afterall.
But it will pass.
I suppose if I had one of those gadgets for my vehicle when my kids went through that period, yea, I'd use it. But I would like to also have a shutoff on the vehicle so that you could not use the cell phone at the same time as driving the car. +1 on the cell phone shutoff I am going thru this right now, my daughter turned 16 in August. She's had drivers ed, a talk with our ins. agent, lectures from mom and dad, and as much practice as I can give her behind the wheel. She is very responsible (as teens go), and gets excellent grades. I just bought her a car (2000 Honda CR-V) but told her she needed to support it - this means a job. She got a job at Super Target and will be making the insurance and putting gas in it. She's already make a couple comments that started with "I didn't realize....." She's gettting a taste of the real world. OK, I'm rambling, but at this time in my life your words hit home with me Al - I see it first hand. I'd like to see a version of the key, or a progamable feature that, along with killing the cell if the cars in drive, senses occupants and won't start unless their seatbelts are fastened, I like the limit of the stereo volume, and, since I will be limiting the number passangers at first, the car will not start if more than the specified number of occupants are sensed. Oh yea, how about a feature that will eject all male passangers ages 15-20, chastity belt, anyone know where to get one? Plans for building a mote? Alligators, gonna need some of those too  I think Fords key is a good idea as long as it's used as an assist to responsible parenting, not as a substitute.
_________________________
05' Chaparral 220 SSI 350 Mag / B3
Seadoo GTS
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