SDS Driving School

SDS Driving School driving school in and around wantage

Anyother first time pass 🙂 Lynn
29/06/2024

Anyother first time pass 🙂 Lynn

A few passes over the last few months
30/04/2024

A few passes over the last few months

04/03/2024

Officers attended a 999 call this morning stating that 5 vehicles in Broughton Lane had slid on black ice, causing subsequent damage to their cars and resident's property.

Shortly after officers arrived on scene, Buckinghamshire highways arrived and advised officers that the road is closed and is likely to be for some time due to the current lake in the middle of it. They also stated that despite placing Road Closed signs up to prevent injury or damage, people persisted in moving these signs, preventing others from seeing them.

These inconsiderate and selfish actions have caused 5 people to crash their vehicles as they did not know the road was closed.

The Road Closed sign was replaced by officers who believed that would be the end of the matter. Unfortunately they were quickly proven wrong.

Less than 20 seconds after putting the signs back up, some more very silly drivers thought it was necessary to ignore the very clear signs and drive on the wrong side of the road to go around the road closure 🤦‍♂️. Unluckily for them, officers were still on scene and pulled them over for a chat. As they were discussing the finer points of road safety, a flurry of cars also decided the signs were optional, leading to officers speaking to a further 30 vehicles.

Road closed means Road Closed! You cannot go though. There is a reason the roads are closed and it will be for the safety of you and those around you.

A couple of excuses we had today were "the sign was only on one side of the road "(it was on the side the driver was supposed to be driving on).

"This road has been closed for ages and it's always fine when I go down" (so you regularly contravene the road traffic act 🤔)

All of the number plates of vehicles involved in these inconsiderate acts have been taken. This includes the ones who tried to make a sneaky turn around before reaching us. All drivers of these vehicles will be receiving a notice of intended prosecution in the post for careless driving for their actions today. Careless driving costs people their lives.

Broughton lane is still closed and is likely to remain so for some time. Officers WILL be back. Drivers who continue to place others at risk, either by driving through the road closed signs or removing these signs, will be spoken to by an officer and will be reciving a ticket.

PC8666 👮🏼‍♂️PC2643 👮🏻‍♀️

03/03/2024

Often parents find the amount of hours recommended by the DVSA incredulous, so let's compare learning to drive in the 80's against the present day:

âś…On average in the 80s, most of us learned with parents regularly, then took 10 - 15 hours professional tuition before passing the test.
✔Present day DVSA recommendations state 45-50 hrs + at least 25 hrs private practice, on average, are taken by those who pass first time.

UK Government statistics show the volume of cars since the 80s has more than doubled:
âś…1980: 20 million; as a result parked cars were sparse, so meeting situations were rare and junctions were quieter.
âś” 2023: 43 million; parked cars fill every road near a town centre which displays no parking restrictions, and most other areas too.

âś…No theory or hazard perception tests in the 80s; just revising signs and rules from the Highway Code.
✔Constantly updated question bank of nearly 1,000 and a minimum score of 86%.
✔Hazard perception clips with a short scoring opportunity and one random clip with two developing hazards, and a minimum score of 59%.
Both these tests must be passed in the same sitting.
The currently active questions are not published.

âś…80s: test duration 20 minutes, but often back within 15 minutes.
✔present day: test duration 35 - 40 minutes, but often longer due to heavy traffic and road diversions.

âś…No parking manoeuvres in the 80s; the test comprised turn in the road (3 point turn) and the left reverse around a corner.
✔Present day manoeuvres are:
Reverse parallel park, finishing within the space of 2 car lengths of the lead vehicle..
Reverse bay park, left or right.
Drive forward into a bay, either left or right, then reverse safely out.
Pull up on the right (facing traffic) reverse 2 car lengths, then rejoin your stream of traffic safely.

âś…No independent driving section in the 80s.
✔Present day requirement is 20 minutes of following signs or Sat nav. In the 80s Sat nav didn't exist, only paper road atlases and A-Zs.

âś…No show me/tell me questions in the 80s, only a few questions randomly from a flip chart of signs and some questions on rules at the end. It wasn't possible to fail on this unless you got a motorway question radically wrong.
✔Present day test has one question asked before driving, then one action to be performed on the move, i.e. "In your own time, please wash your rear screen as we continue to drive."

âś…Infrastructure of the 80s:
Very few bus lanes, even in London, and certainly no red routes.
Less parking restrictions.
Less roundabouts.
Traffic lights lacked advance stop lines and cycle boxes.
20 zones and traffic calming measures had yet to be introduced.
'Bobbies on the beat', 'panda cars', and traffic patrols were a common sight and this reinforced the standards on the road. This meant drivers tended to be courteous and give space to learner drivers.
Darth Vader was teaching us the Green X Code - Yes really!
Cycling Proficiency was taught within and outside schools; I still have my enamel pin badge.
Roads were maintained to a higher standard; a standard where you didn't have to weave through potholes on almost every street to avoid damage to your vehicle. Where white lines and road markings could seemingly survive a nuclear blast rather than disappearing inside 6 months.
Concurrent or 'satellite' roundabouts, like the infamous 'Magic Roundabout' in Swindon weren't yet a gleam in the road planner's eye, and neither were spiral roundabouts.
Cars were significantly smaller, with driver aids amounting only to auto wash/wipe and brake servo assistance.
For comparison:
1980 VW Polo: 3600mm long, 1560mm wide, 1340mm tall, 685kg.
2023 VW Polo: 4074mm long, 1751mm wide (exc mirrors), 1451mm tall, 1173kg.

✔Roads are now far busier, junctions and road infrastructure is more complex. There are vastly more signs, markings, vehicles and rules.

✔A candidate passing their test in the UK today is subject to The New Drivers Act for a period of 2 years: During this time accruing 6 or more points will mean your licence will be revoked. You will have have to reapply for a fresh provisional licence, pass the theory test and driving tests again, with all the expense that entails.

There must be some negatives for those of us learning in the 80s, surely?
Ok:
🤓 Cars tended to have only 4 gears, unless they were either luxury cars or sports cars; simpler, but also more imperative to match the gears precisely to the road speed.
🤓 Brakes tended to be drums rather than discs and the ability to stop was dire.
🤓Power steering was a luxury afforded only to luxury cars; the rest of us didn't need the gym for the upper body due to this omission.
🤓Mirrors were interior and driver side only.
🤓 We weren't taught any form of parking because it wasn't tested, and that shows in many drivers; some would still rather return home than reverse parallel park, even to this day.
🤓 Most ADIs taught us only enough to get us through the test rather than enough to be SAFE.

If you've enjoyed my ramblings please react and share.
If you know someone who'd benefit from this information, please react and share.
If you have any additional comparisons or experiences or funny driver training/testing stories from 'yesteryear', let me know in the comments 👇🤗

21/01/2024

Often parents find the amount of hours recommended by the DVSA incredulous, so let's compare learning to drive in the 80's against the present day:

âś…On average in the 80s, most of us learned with parents regularly, then took 10 - 15 hours professional tuition before passing the test.
✔Present day DVSA recommendations state 45-50 hrs + at least 25 hrs private practice, on average, are taken by those who pass first time.

UK Government statistics show the volume of cars since the 80s has more than doubled:
âś…1980: 20 million; as a result parked cars were sparse, so meeting situations were rare and junctions were quieter.
âś” 2023: 43 million; parked cars fill every road near a town centre which displays no parking restrictions, and most other areas too.

âś…No theory or hazard perception tests in the 80s; just revising signs and rules from the Highway Code.
✔Constantly updated question bank of 1,000 and a minimum score of 86%.
✔Hazard perception clips with a short scoring opportunity and one random clip with two developing hazards, and a minimum score of 59%.
Both these tests must be passed in the same sitting.
The currently active questions are not published.

âś…80s: test duration 20 minutes, but often back within 15 minutes.
✔present day: test duration 35 - 40 minutes, but often longer due to heavy traffic and road diversions.

âś…No parking manoeuvres in the 80s; the test comprised turn in the road (3 point turn) and the left reverse around a corner.
✔Present day manoeuvres are:
Reverse parallel park, finishing within the space of 2 car lengths of the lead vehicle..
Reverse bay park, left or right.
Drive forward into a bay, either left or right, then reverse safely out.
Pull up on the right (facing traffic) reverse 2 car lengths, then rejoin your stream of traffic safely.

âś…No independent driving section in the 80s.
✔Present day requirement is 20 minutes of following signs or Sat nav. In the 80s Sat nav didn't exist, only paper road atlases and A-Zs.

âś…No show me/tell me questions in the 80s, only a few questions randomly from a flip chart of signs and some questions on rules at the end. It wasn't possible to fail on this unless you got a motorway question radically wrong.
✔Present day test has one question asked before driving, then one action to be performed on the move, i.e. "In your own time, please wash your rear screen as we continue to drive."

âś…Infrastructure of the 80s:
Very few bus lanes, even in London, and certainly no red routes.
Less parking restrictions.
Less roundabouts.
Traffic lights lacked advance stop lines and cycle boxes.
20 zones and traffic calming measures had yet to be introduced.
'Bobbies on the beat', 'panda cars', and traffic patrols were a common sight and this reinforced the standards on the road. This meant drivers tended to be courteous and give space to learner drivers.
Darth Vader was teaching us the Green X Code - Yes really!
Cycling Proficiency was taught within and outside schools; I still have my enamel pin badge.
Roads were maintained to a higher standard; a standard where you didn't have to weave through potholes on almost every street to avoid damage to your vehicle. Where white lines and road markings could seemingly survive a nuclear blast rather than disappearing inside 6 months.
Concurrent or 'satellite' roundabouts, like the infamous 'Magic Roundabout' in Swindon weren't yet a gleam in the road planner's eye, and neither were spiral roundabouts.
Cars were significantly smaller, with driver aids amounting only to auto wash/wipe and brake servo assistance.
For comparison:
1980 VW Polo: 3600mm long, 1560mm wide, 1340mm tall, 685kg.
2023 VW Polo: 4074mm long, 1751mm wide (exc mirrors), 1451mm tall, 1173kg.

✔Roads are now far busier, junctions and road infrastructure is more complex. There are vastly more signs, markings, vehicles and rules.

✔A candidate passing their test in the UK today is subject to The New Drivers Act for a period of 2 years: During this time accruing 6 or more points will mean your licence will be revoked. You will have have to reapply for a fresh provisional licence, pass the theory test and driving tests again, with all the expense that entails.

There must be some negatives for those of us learning in the 80s, surely?
Ok:
🤓 Cars tended to have only 4 gears, unless they were either luxury cars or sports cars; simpler, but also more imperative to match the gears precisely to the road speed.
🤓 Brakes tended to be drums rather than discs and the ability to stop was dire.
🤓Power steering was a luxury afforded only to luxury cars; the rest of us didn't need the gym for the upper body due to this omission.
🤓Mirrors were interior and driver side only.
🤓 We weren't taught any form of parking because it wasn't tested, and that shows in many drivers; some would still rather return home than reverse parallel park, even to this day.
🤓 Most ADIs taught us only enough to get us through the test rather than enough to be SAFE.

If you have any additional comparisons or experiences or funny driver training/testing stories from 'yesteryear', let me know in the comments 👇🤗

That's another one :) 5df We on a roll at the moment that's 6 out of 7 passes in 14 days
01/11/2023

That's another one :)
5df
We on a roll at the moment that's 6 out of 7 passes in 14 days

Two more in the bag :) Well done both
27/10/2023

Two more in the bag :)
Well done both

20/10/2023

Well what a week 🙂
Wednesday
Car test Bentley Wilkie pass

Friday
Car test Jack Pass
Part 3 adi test Chris passed

24hrs
7 new pupils to be slotted in lol
With in next few weeks 🙂

Think try and have a bit of weekend down time with boy and grandkids 🙂

For over next few weeks to be drinking coffee and talking and planing
When new instructor will be starting
Along with then opening there diary up 🙂
Early talks will be looking at start of January next year, as there's a bit of planing to do 🙂

Get in there 🙂
20/10/2023

Get in there 🙂

Well done that man 🙂 1DF Laura SargisonHelen Blowfield
18/10/2023

Well done that man 🙂
1DF
Laura Sargison
Helen Blowfield

Address

65 Naldertown
Wantage
OX129EA

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 9pm
Tuesday 9am - 9pm
Wednesday 9am - 9pm
Thursday 9am - 9pm
Friday 9am - 2pm
Saturday 9am - 2pm

Telephone

+447766661050

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