It’s always been like this in most European countries. You take the exam on cars provided by either the examiner or your driving school. If you’re super lucky you get to take it on the car you used the most while learning but that would be blind luck, depends how cars get allocated and how many people are taking the exam on that particular day.
The reason is that in Europe we have to use certified cars for learning and exam, and also they need to have double command — they are fitted with extra pedals on the passenger side so the instructor/examiner can take over in case of imminent collision or to demonstrate a point.
You take the exam on cars provided by either the examiner or your driving school.
The second option usually happens only if you wanna get an automatic-only car driving license (B78), like me. I had to pay my instructor for renting me his car for the exam’s duration – standard practice, especially since it was his “daily” after working hours.
If you’re super lucky you get to take it on the car you used the most while learning
If you want to get the full driving license (B) and have no disabilities, you learn on a driving school’s manual and take an exam on an examination center’s manual. They’re separate entities, so you never get the same physical car. At least the model should be the same – driving schools usually match their fleet with whichever model local examination center picked. E.g. in Warsaw it’s Hyundai i20, so most (if not all) schools teach on Hyundai i20.
depends how cars get allocated
Like I’ve said before, examination center’s cars are never used for teaching. That’s driving school’s job.
Yeah but it can work the other way around. In Romania for example the examiners are Police and you don’t take the exam on Police cars, they have arrangements to use driving school cars.
It’s always been like this in most European countries. You take the exam on cars provided by either the examiner or your driving school. If you’re super lucky you get to take it on the car you used the most while learning but that would be blind luck, depends how cars get allocated and how many people are taking the exam on that particular day.
The reason is that in Europe we have to use certified cars for learning and exam, and also they need to have double command — they are fitted with extra pedals on the passenger side so the instructor/examiner can take over in case of imminent collision or to demonstrate a point.
The second option usually happens only if you wanna get an automatic-only car driving license (B78), like me. I had to pay my instructor for renting me his car for the exam’s duration – standard practice, especially since it was his “daily” after working hours.
If you want to get the full driving license (B) and have no disabilities, you learn on a driving school’s manual and take an exam on an examination center’s manual. They’re separate entities, so you never get the same physical car. At least the model should be the same – driving schools usually match their fleet with whichever model local examination center picked. E.g. in Warsaw it’s Hyundai i20, so most (if not all) schools teach on Hyundai i20.
Like I’ve said before, examination center’s cars are never used for teaching. That’s driving school’s job.
Yeah but it can work the other way around. In Romania for example the examiners are Police and you don’t take the exam on Police cars, they have arrangements to use driving school cars.
Lol, in my part of America instructors are like, “I don’t know who you are, but I trust you enough to not kill us both”