congrats on the purchase! and welcome.
everyone's got their methods to madness, and everyone loves to share! i'm one of them
kirby has some great tips. here's what i did to learn how to drive it. (at first, i just gave it a lot of gas and dropped the clutch. while good for fast starts, a horrible way to start every time.. then i eventually i learned how to do it properly. so by the time i got my car, i was ok.)
slow clutch release: makes the shift smoother, but if you do it too slowly constantly, while revving high, it's not good for the clutch.
for normal driving i shift around 2500-3500 rpm band. during a cold start, i try to keep it under 3k rpm.
only way to really stall a manual is by letting go of the clutch too fast, while not reving high enough. (non-stick driver's left foot just isn't used to "fine" control necessary.) if you rev high and drop the clutch fast, you peel out
w/ dsc off of course.
more than anything, i think 2 things are really important in driving a stick (seems universal).
1. rev control w/ no load on the engine. (what kirby had his daughter do. put the parking brake on, car on neutral. practice balancing the rev at a certain point. say 2k or 2.5k. it's not the easiest thing to do, even now for me, but helpful.) esp since it is easy to over rev with the right foot, while concentrating ont he left foot, trying to fine control the release of the clutch.
you can practice doing this on a regular automatic too, before you pick up your manual, just put the tranny on neutral, or even park and bounce the tech around and trying to balance it at the rpm that you want to balance it at.
2. clutch control.
one of the easiest ways to do is is to find an empty parking lot. a flat empty parking lot w/ no hills! (as if you need a reminder
) DO NOT touch the accel! shift the car into first, and release the clutch slowly. and even after the engine engages, and the car starts moving forward, keep slowly releasing the clutch. your car will start rolling forward, just like in an automatic! i was amazed by this the first time! keep doing that until you get a feel for it.
combine 1 and 2 and accel around. and remember, always be slow w/ the clutch. even if you end up stalling, the stall caused by a slow clutch release is much better than an arupt one. (at least you won't cringe at the sound of the stall as much.)
avoid the hills stops if at all possible, but if you are ever stuck in one. Don't panic! turn on your emergency blinker if you have to let other cars pass you, if you have to! and right before starting, while braking, calmly do the slow start tech pointed in #2 as the light turns green. (you should know the engagement point by now) right as the engine engages, keep the clutch there, take your right foot off the brake and give it some gas while slowly lifting off the clutch. (as long as you keep the rev over 1500k or so, you shouldn't stall.) again dont' panic in the situation, remind yourself to stay calm, and do what you have to do
of course, this makes perfect sense to me, but who knows how you'll read it. best way to learn is by practice. as for the rental car, it's pretty hard to find a manual rentals, one of the reasons being that lots of Americans don't know how to drive a manual, and repairing costs far outweigh the savings of getting an automatic in the fleet. imo. (at least aroudn here anyway..) but if you could find one, practice away!