If you are learning to drive or will be starting soon please check out my Ultimate Driving Course. The Ultimate Driving Course itself has been designed to enhance your Driving Journey helping you save time and money on your driving Lessons by offering structured and informative videos on every single topic required to pass your test for the price of one lesson But don’t take my word for it, I have unlocked the first three modules/10 Videos of the Automatic and Manual Editions of the Ultimate Driving Course for you to try. So even if you don’t buy the course you will be prepared for your first few lessons with your own Instructor www.ultimatedrivingcourse.com/ We have now introduced a FREE TO ACCESS Theory Section. As part of Phase 1 you can now access the below features.
• Practice Theory Questions • Road Sign Flashcards • Theory Mock Tests These new features will be free to access regardless of whether you have purchased the Ultimate Driving Course or not.
I don’t think their is a hazard perception test in India 😂 if you wanted to do a test you drive in a straight line take a left and stop after 50 yards and you have passed 👍
@@SH-uw9fe It used to beblike that but in Places like Delhi now they have dedicated test centres that have a private course forndping the test on 😂 prior to that tho it wasgo up the road do a Uturn up the Road Uturn and if you made it back to the instructor (No they would not risk their live going with you) in one piece you’d pass 🤣
I think I understand now why driving tests are done on closed tracks - nobody would have ever passed on the road. Literally theoretically impossible to pass.
Number of Road-related deaths per 100,000 motor vehicles per year:- Norway: 3 UK: 6 USA: 16 Russia: 50 China: 105 India: 130 Pakistan: 284 Bangladesh: 1020 Madagascar: 2963 Rwanda: 3521 Somalia: 6532 Carnage is a relative word.
@@death_parade ayee i am from chandigarh too and can confirm the person saying that there is no need for belt is an complete ass hole... let him visit chandigarh once
Hi its very amazing to see you driving in India I m from India and I just passed my driving licence in UK..at the time when I was learning driving with my instructor I saw lots of your videos which you uploaded that's helped me alot to pass my driving licence in 1st go, appreciated your knowledge as a instructor one thing specialist I picked from your vedios is that use good trainer's shoes. I followed your advise its give me very good results when I followed same shoes all the driving lessons.i started from skerch I never drive in India. It was fanatic to saw you in India as you are driving there is looked like I am not able to driver there ..😮thanks your support for new learners..Thanks alot😊 but still love India ❤️
DRIVING in india will help you in following ways. 1) Improved reflex: One should be constantly alert and should keep an eye on all sides, left right front back and u have fraction of a sec to react. 2) U will never fall asleep while driving bcos others are honking to keep you awake. 3) Your analysing,planning & forecasting skiils will improve : You should analyse if the rikshaw in front will stop or take left or right, u gotta plan ahead in advance to apply brake and also forecast about possible collision if u take right or slowdown and someone might hit your car. You will take appropriate actions based on above projections. Even a cow thats standing on road u gotta analyse its mood and forecast if it will move left or right. Basically U will become a PRO in life if u learn how to drive in India
Also a lot of the drivers don't use indicators to turn right or left, and those who do, often turn the other way of their indicators. Driving in India is seriously a lot of guessing game.
Actually, this is what many people seem to think, but in reality, the reverse is true. Experienced Indian drivers are the ones who fail most often when it comes to taking the driving test in the UK or Sweden, because they would have picked up a lot of bad habits that are really hard to get rid of. When you mention planning, in India, one looks at what is five feet away from the car; that's the extent of the envelop for planning, as everything beyond that is too far away. In Sweden, you need to learn to plan by looking much farther ahead, like hundreds of feet ahead. Indian drivers really have it hard passing driving tests in Europe. The US doesn't really count, as they don't test driving skills anywhere near as strictly as it is done in Europe.
When you start driving in India or Jakarta Indonesia, then when you try to drive around UK or US it feels like wtf is this? why the road are so 'empty' HAHAHA 😂😂
Many things your cousin stated are wrong, you are driving perfectly well, we do wear seatbelts, and if a traffic police officer catches you without a seatbelt he will challan you for sure. Also, yes we merge in intersections without stopping but we do slow down and we drive on the basis of instinct if we feel that the other car is too fast or too close we honk and even stop sometimes to avoid accidents. Some people do risky overtakes on single-lane roads but most avoid and in that case as well instinct plays a vital role, if we feel that the car coming from the opposite side is too fast we often merge back into our lane. Last but not least, on freeways ( we call them highways ) trucks/lorries drive on rightmost because the left lanes are used by bikes, three-wheelers, and slow vehicles, accident of these vehicles with heavy motor vehicles can be very serious, and often be a life and death situation. Everything has a reason and it's a full-fledged system, in cities during traffic jams you will find we many times have 3 vehicles side-by-side in two lanes and 4-5 vehicles side-by-side in a 3-lane road. That is because we have too many vehicles.
It's like the road conditions and behaviours here in Manila. I'm a learner here btw and I'm moving to UK next year so watching your videos are super helpful.
OMG! I went India in September and stayed at my family village Palahi which is near the roundabout in the video! I’ve driven on those roads too and it’s not for the faint hearted haha
Yeah, he is near Phagwara area, there is also a video of him driving in Phagwara, my village is also 12km from Phagwara and yes I have some relatives in Palahi too
@@nayz-It's most likely counterfeited horn. I haven't heard any car brand with that kind of horn in India. Even the Indian car brands don't have horn like that so I don't think it is original horn.
Passed my test and been driving for about 2 years. I also visit india once every other year for the same reasons you mentioned. But I just wanna take a moment to appreciate the 99% safe roads of UK. Just the lack of motorbikes in UK is a blessing in disguise. Plus pathways for folks to walk in, plus functioning signals and crosswalks. People back home knows the rules but won't follow because of the reason that others won't follow. It will be very difficult for everyone to suddenly just start following rules. One can only hope India will get better in around 10-20 years time.
Come on night thoughts like lying naked with a partner an expect something to happen, if you don't take the effort nothing's gonna happen even in 30 years
That's not going to happen in 100 yrs also, because india is largest market for 2 wheeler who will risk their loss of tax money? Cars only 5% indians can buy because of the tax. Improvements in India are error 404
Organised chaos is the phrase that comes to mind, especially on some of that dual carriageway. Edit: Just looked up per capita fatalities for India versus UK: yes it's worse in India, but nowhere near as bad as some other places. Saudi Arabia, Iran and much of sub-Saharan Africa seems much worse. Worst of all seems to be Libya, so hate to think what driving might be like in some of these places.
You also need to consider how many accidents actually get reported. Some of these countries don’t have car insurances or at least most people don’t care enough to pay for it so many accidents are never even reported
@@saphyr84 You buy a car and you get an insurance along with it that's why he said that. And it's not like drivers don't have license they do have license but they bribed their way out of driving test
@@saphyr84no you can't drive a car without licence in india if traffic police catch you driving without licence you are gone. It is that there are ways to get a driving licence without giving driving test. You pay some money and you just have to go though procedure just for formality and you will have your license.
😂 excellent, i e driven in Bangladesh, s,e Asia Oz, Europe but i always find cities with trams and no separate tramway a bit of a stress. Melbourne, Amsterdam. I love the parked cycles just in the middle of the road, nice bike let you go on the roundabout 😂😂 Happy holidays man.
Bruh this is the most easiest driving I’ve seen please come to Bangalore or to Delhi and drive I’ve been driving in Bangalore for quite some time and trust me where your driving right now looks pretty easy to me
In India Horn is a symbol to make other aware your presence, say hi to other drivers , say bye to other , ask them weather, curry , papadam and tikka masala while driving
Great to see the good relations between the instructor and student!!!💯💯such scenarios are rare to see where the instructor visits the students country 💯
😂 So true man.. even me as an Indian wasn't aware of anything like that. Felt bad at the same time that people use stupid things like that just to avoid basic discipline.
Extreme Poverty takes morality and discipline out of people. For past 2 century indians lived in extreme poverty. It's just 1 decade since when number of middle class people have overtaken poor class in india, so now upcoming generation follow more rules
I learnt to drive and passed my test in the UK (Wolverhampton test centre, same as where my man Pin teaches). But then I moved to Pakistan for a few years, and that’s where I matured as a driver. So now being back in the UK and driving, it feels really weird following the driving rules and having to give way to everyone 😂
Wow, what a crazy country. You have to be on the ball,otherwise you’d be dead or others. Though vehicles pulling out in front of you at junctions is the norm here in the U.K.
i agree the fact that Indians do not follow traffic rules, and i appreciate showing it on the social media because people atleast get ashamed and follow rules but apart from that show the good things of india as well, and stop demeaning the country before others.
I think you drove in a village or very small town that's why there was no traffic. You have to drive in big cities to get the real vibe of indian 🚦 traffic.
Indians are accustomeed and adept at handling multiple road hazards...If you can drive safely in India..you can drive anywhere in the world and pass driving tests in every country.
During lock downs I learnt driving watching your videos, but I must say the roads you chose to show India are like lock down streets, empty and pose no challenge to even a beginner. Please, come to Kolkata ( Calcutta) and do a video during pick hours between Dakshineswar to Tollygunj, It'll be a real fun. I can't give you my car, but I'd arrange an old car for you.
one of the reasons lorry drivers in india drive in the right side on highway, cause people there be coming fast/without looking from left, so if a lorry is being driven on the left and suddenly someone comes by joining the highway, it's going to be a head on collision.
No need to unfollow rules, if they are honking, let them know by hand to pass first. And lol, when I learnt to ride a car, I had less anxiety that this instructor. Once you understand the behaviour of traffic, you adopt to it quickly. It's just happens subconsciously.
I've been to Mumbai and Gurgaon and the driving there is just as bad if not worse in a lot of cases. I would not drive there if my life depended on it, but I took an uber every day to go to work and every single time the driver was breaking the rules like going on the wrong side of the road on a dual carriageway, ignoring red lights, ignoring priority at roundabouts, etc.. I have never been as scared for my life as those uber trips! The horn is also much more common in the big cities, it's almost like a constant background noise no matter where you are.
09:20 slow lane is fast lane due to a reason/problem in india, actually their is no proper footpath/sidewalk at most of the places and no proper partition also between people walking and the left side of highways, and if some slow vehicle(ex. truck) wants to cruise at a slow speed peacefully then they have to move sticking with the divider(and thats now become a habit too). if someone sees a place where people are not walking on left, you overtake the truck from left. if you are a motorcyclist, then you can easily overtake from left. overtaking from left is not very ideal, but thats due to poor markings/partitions, almost non existent footpaths. Imagine that a truck is moving on the left lane, and suddenly there are pedestrians walking on the left side, and the same time a big bus decides to overtake from right, then that truck is sandwiched between pedestrians and bus, creating a very dangerous situation. So, the onus of taking care of not hitting pedestrians while overtaking is on the overtaking bus driver, and the truck driver can keep moving sticking to the divider peacefully without thinking.
Trust me Guys i recently moved from india(bangalore) to Australia for short time , my blood pressure level has been reduced drastically only because of the disciplined traffic
If the trucks dont "hog"the fast lane. They'll be stuck longer than you. So they just keep right (Except on the now expressways which are not becoming pretty common) and it's pretty efficient for state highways and stuff
Interesting to watch. At least everyone is friendly, which makes the experience much nicer. I expected a few animals to pop up from nowhere onto the road to make it even more challenging. Back where I come from in Southern Africa, you sometimes find donkeys and cows lying on the road. I wonder what happens if there is a collision between cars. Do people have insurance in India?
I live in North India Rajasthan We have no rules here even police here don't wear helmets and seatbelts. Everyday people rams their motorcycle and cars on animals and people's 😂
yo my driving test is in 3 days, i did 4 hours of driving with the instructor and way way more with my family, i hope i will pass it, my instructor told my that i was perfect on everything so it gave me a bit of comfort, lesgo
@@gigibroieddi665I passed last week 4th try. Don’t beat yourself up over it. Whatever your mistakes were just practice again and again with your instructor until you feel more confident. You will smash it lad. Good luck.
@01:45 - It is a rule and by law that front seat passenger and driver are required to wear seatbelts. His claim of 'no need to wear seat belt' is absurd
Its not absurd. He never said its legal to not wear a seat belt, he just said you don't need to which is true because its rarely enforced. Being from pakistan when I go the driver and front passenger only ever wear their seatbelts when we're reaching the toll plaza cause the bloke inside checks 😂
"the roads are now definetly improved" - 3 sec later he drives on a road where he dosent know if he sits on the front or the back seat from being slammed around
I would invite you to drive in North-East India. Although it's a hilly region and not the most developed parts of India, but people follow the traffic rule better than rest of India, as my experience.
@@STARK50 eastern part of Assam, almost touching arunachal and nagaland, idk about dibrugarh but the roads there some places are bad, meanwhile places in and around tinsukia the law related to traffic is just outright bad including the roads, feels like jharkhand and bihar where ppl don't give one shit about it Also just recently I visited dibrugarh rail station and there was no barricade there for ppl and bike crossing the tracks...(there's a bike path made at end of station) Ive lived in Siliguri and Kolkata and Delhi and so my standards would be based on those places, mainly Siliguri though since other two are metrocities
If you are learning to drive or will be starting soon please check out my Ultimate Driving Course. The Ultimate Driving Course itself has been designed to enhance your Driving Journey helping you save time and money on your driving Lessons by offering structured and informative videos on every single topic required to pass your test for the price of one lesson
But don’t take my word for it, I have unlocked the first three modules/10 Videos of the Automatic and Manual Editions of the Ultimate Driving Course for you to try. So even if you don’t buy the course you will be prepared for your first few lessons with your own Instructor
www.ultimatedrivingcourse.com/
We have now introduced a FREE TO ACCESS Theory Section. As part of Phase 1 you can now access the below features.
• Practice Theory Questions
• Road Sign Flashcards
• Theory Mock Tests
These new features will be free to access regardless of whether you have purchased the Ultimate Driving Course or not.
Please do a video in Pakistan driving
Could you imagine an Indian hazard perception test 😂 you'd just be constantly clicking 😂😂😂
You’d have to click when there isn’t a hazard 😁
I don’t think their is a hazard perception test in India 😂 if you wanted to do a test you drive in a straight line take a left and stop after 50 yards and you have passed 👍
@@SH-uw9fe It used to beblike that but in Places like Delhi now they have dedicated test centres that have a private course forndping the test on 😂 prior to that tho it wasgo up the road do a Uturn up the Road Uturn and if you made it back to the instructor (No they would not risk their live going with you) in one piece you’d pass 🤣
What is that ?
Judging by the standard of driving out there I don't think the concept of "hazard" even exists. Just barge through, might is right.
I think I understand now why driving tests are done on closed tracks - nobody would have ever passed on the road. Literally theoretically impossible to pass.
Just don't hit anything and you'll probably pass 😂
It’s organised chaos
driving in real roads are 20times harder than the course. I live in a town and the test was just reverse left right and park lol
How are new drivers supposed to pass road test when more experienced ones are violating all rules
What?? In my country the test is out on the main streets lol.
DGN Driving and Clearview Driving need to do a driving mock test video together
YESSS that would be firee
DGN Driving, Clearview Driving and Conquer Driving would be the ultimate trio
@@sloppygamer1291💯
You read my mind, that’s what I was thinking
100% this needs to happen!!
India is probably the only country where replacing the horn is even something to think about.
horn should be banned in india
@@Anticommunism99 then alot of people will die mate...
people actually do replace stock horn on some vehicles here if its too low sounding
@SoulShadow69 Yeah that's why I replaced my Jazz's horn with a Polo's.
@@Anticommunism99
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂Nyc joke
"No need to wear the belt, it's India!" - Erm... you DEFINITELY want to wear the belt in India, it's carnage on their roads😬
Number of Road-related deaths per 100,000 motor vehicles per year:-
Norway: 3
UK: 6
USA: 16
Russia: 50
China: 105
India: 130
Pakistan: 284
Bangladesh: 1020
Madagascar: 2963
Rwanda: 3521
Somalia: 6532
Carnage is a relative word.
@@death_parade you destroy him
He Just left the chat 😂
Yeah here in south India police will be waiting to fine us in every corner if not wearing seatbelts
@@arshu2019 Same here in Chandigarh. Nobody here is brave enough to not wear a seatbelt.
@@death_parade ayee i am from chandigarh too and can confirm the person saying that there is no need for belt is an complete ass hole... let him visit chandigarh once
I love that Nikka is smiling throughout the whole video! 😂 his English was so pure when he said "I told you" 😭
You just said that as an excuse to say nigga 😂😂😂😂
The only MOT check you need there is the Horn. If you were to horn at someone in the UK they would flip you off lol . Very entertaining.
When I first went to 🇵🇰 the horn drove me mad and I thought the same thing if you did this in 🏴 peaple would go mad 😅
😂😂😂
This might be where my anxiety actually helps because I'd be super alert the whole time. WOW!!! Thanks Pin and cousin 😊
Hi its very amazing to see you driving in India I m from India and I just passed my driving licence in UK..at the time when I was learning driving with my instructor I saw lots of your videos which you uploaded that's helped me alot to pass my driving licence in 1st go, appreciated your knowledge as a instructor one thing specialist I picked from your vedios is that use good trainer's shoes. I followed your advise its give me very good results when I followed same shoes all the driving lessons.i started from skerch I never drive in India. It was fanatic to saw you in India as you are driving there is looked like I am not able to driver there ..😮thanks your support for new learners..Thanks alot😊 but still love India ❤️
This makes me feel a bit safer driving in Ireland 😂 My anxiety would be through the roof!
How’s traffic different ?😊
If you can drive in India then you can drive in every country of the world.😁
Haha pressing horn in empty road
😂
@@rajvanshsingh8165not true
@@Longjohnson-pb2vx
Yes true. People from west are driving on easy difficulty.
DRIVING in india will help you in following ways.
1) Improved reflex: One should be constantly alert and should keep an eye on all sides, left right front back and u have fraction of a sec to react.
2) U will never fall asleep while driving bcos others are honking to keep you awake.
3) Your analysing,planning & forecasting skiils will improve : You should analyse if the rikshaw in front will stop or take left or right, u gotta plan ahead in advance to apply brake and also forecast about possible collision if u take right or slowdown and someone might hit your car. You will take appropriate actions based on above projections.
Even a cow thats standing on road u gotta analyse its mood and forecast if it will move left or right.
Basically U will become a PRO in life if u learn how to drive in India
Also a lot of the drivers don't use indicators to turn right or left, and those who do, often turn the other way of their indicators. Driving in India is seriously a lot of guessing game.
Actually, this is what many people seem to think, but in reality, the reverse is true. Experienced Indian drivers are the ones who fail most often when it comes to taking the driving test in the UK or Sweden, because they would have picked up a lot of bad habits that are really hard to get rid of. When you mention planning, in India, one looks at what is five feet away from the car; that's the extent of the envelop for planning, as everything beyond that is too far away. In Sweden, you need to learn to plan by looking much farther ahead, like hundreds of feet ahead. Indian drivers really have it hard passing driving tests in Europe. The US doesn't really count, as they don't test driving skills anywhere near as strictly as it is done in Europe.
I passed my UK driving test last month in 1st attempt without single minnor fault all bcoz of I am driving in India from last 15years.😂😂🎉
Aye it is defo because of that lol
When you start driving in India or Jakarta Indonesia, then when you try to drive around UK or US it feels like wtf is this? why the road are so 'empty' HAHAHA 😂😂
When u drive in India u feel like u driving with hundreds of hazards at a time🤣🤣🤣
@@hahazamesame bro 🤣
Many things your cousin stated are wrong, you are driving perfectly well, we do wear seatbelts, and if a traffic police officer catches you without a seatbelt he will challan you for sure. Also, yes we merge in intersections without stopping but we do slow down and we drive on the basis of instinct if we feel that the other car is too fast or too close we honk and even stop sometimes to avoid accidents. Some people do risky overtakes on single-lane roads but most avoid and in that case as well instinct plays a vital role, if we feel that the car coming from the opposite side is too fast we often merge back into our lane.
Last but not least, on freeways ( we call them highways ) trucks/lorries drive on rightmost because the left lanes are used by bikes, three-wheelers, and slow vehicles, accident of these vehicles with heavy motor vehicles can be very serious, and often be a life and death situation.
Everything has a reason and it's a full-fledged system, in cities during traffic jams you will find we many times have 3 vehicles side-by-side in two lanes and 4-5 vehicles side-by-side in a 3-lane road. That is because we have too many vehicles.
Agree with the most, the last point is not too many vehicles, its just pure stupidity, opportunistic and no care for one another.
Uk theory test should use this video for hazard perception test haha
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂great idea
The whole test would be just you clicking lol
No one would pass, the system would think everyone is cheating by clicking so many times 😂
You would be clicking non stop
It's like the road conditions and behaviours here in Manila. I'm a learner here btw and I'm moving to UK next year so watching your videos are super helpful.
Where abouts are you gonna be living in England
Don't make the mistake of moving there. You will have to cry.
I had to Indiavene 😉
😂nice one
😂
OMG! I went India in September and stayed at my family village Palahi which is near the roundabout in the video! I’ve driven on those roads too and it’s not for the faint hearted haha
Yeah, he is near Phagwara area, there is also a video of him driving in Phagwara, my village is also 12km from Phagwara and yes I have some relatives in Palahi too
Even the horn sounds funny - unless it's just because I'm not used to hearing it so often 😂
I think manufacturers adjusted it for the Indian/South Asian market lol
@@nayz-and it's easy to get an aftermarket horn in India
@@nayz-It's most likely counterfeited horn. I haven't heard any car brand with that kind of horn in India. Even the Indian car brands don't have horn like that so I don't think it is original horn.
@@adityasingh3963Old i20 does have this horn. But it sounds slightly different because of how quickly(gently) he is pushing
As an Indian , i thought all countries uses horn like that
It makes me proud to know a british punjabi driving instructor is helping millions 💪🏼
Only rule you need to follow is to stay on the left side of the road. You are good
Thank you very much for sharing this video, it’s wonderful to get to know other places and customs! 😉 🇧🇷
Passed my test and been driving for about 2 years. I also visit india once every other year for the same reasons you mentioned. But I just wanna take a moment to appreciate the 99% safe roads of UK. Just the lack of motorbikes in UK is a blessing in disguise. Plus pathways for folks to walk in, plus functioning signals and crosswalks. People back home knows the rules but won't follow because of the reason that others won't follow. It will be very difficult for everyone to suddenly just start following rules. One can only hope India will get better in around 10-20 years time.
Come on night thoughts like lying naked with a partner an expect something to happen, if you don't take the effort nothing's gonna happen even in 30 years
That's not going to happen in 100 yrs also, because india is largest market for 2 wheeler who will risk their loss of tax money? Cars only 5% indians can buy because of the tax. Improvements in India are error 404
EPIC beard and glasses your cousin has. Bloody scarey looking roads though. Greeting from N.Ireland.
Organised chaos is the phrase that comes to mind, especially on some of that dual carriageway.
Edit: Just looked up per capita fatalities for India versus UK: yes it's worse in India, but nowhere near as bad as some other places. Saudi Arabia, Iran and much of sub-Saharan Africa seems much worse. Worst of all seems to be Libya, so hate to think what driving might be like in some of these places.
You also need to consider how many accidents actually get reported. Some of these countries don’t have car insurances or at least most people don’t care enough to pay for it so many accidents are never even reported
@@Nightwing-hf2sx You can't drive without a car insurance in India and it's enforced. I think this figure is very close to accurate.
You can drive without a license like stated in the video and car insurance is enforced? Highly doubt that.
@@saphyr84 You buy a car and you get an insurance along with it that's why he said that. And it's not like drivers don't have license they do have license but they bribed their way out of driving test
@@saphyr84no you can't drive a car without licence in india if traffic police catch you driving without licence you are gone. It is that there are ways to get a driving licence without giving driving test. You pay some money and you just have to go though procedure just for formality and you will have your license.
😂 excellent, i e driven in Bangladesh,
s,e Asia
Oz, Europe but i always find cities with trams and no separate tramway a bit of a stress. Melbourne, Amsterdam. I love the parked cycles just in the middle of the road, nice bike let you go on the roundabout 😂😂
Happy holidays man.
That seat belt clip 😂
Not gonna lie, it looks like loads if fun to drive there. The only rule is to not die, the rest is optional.
As an Indian agree on that
Passed test today! Thank you for all these videos they were so helpfull🚗
Bruh this is the most easiest driving I’ve seen please come to Bangalore or to Delhi and drive I’ve been driving in Bangalore for quite some time and trust me where your driving right now looks pretty easy to me
As a Bangalorean I gotta agree, there’s barely any cars on the road in this video and roads are also adequately wide
In India Horn is a symbol to make other aware your presence, say hi to other drivers , say bye to other , ask them weather, curry , papadam and tikka masala while driving
🤣
That was awesome. I’d love to have a go at driving in India, don’t think I’d do very well, but I’d give it a go!!!!
Same here
Horn is your best friend
youd be alright. i like the attitude
Great to see the good relations between the instructor and student!!!💯💯such scenarios are rare to see where the instructor visits the students country 💯
Being indian we do or die .And absolutely we like it
The antibeeper gave me quite a chuckle, should also come with a beer cap opener ;D
Also those SUNGLASSES, damn.
😂 So true man.. even me as an Indian wasn't aware of anything like that. Felt bad at the same time that people use stupid things like that just to avoid basic discipline.
A lot better than when I went. Experienced Mumbai, New Delhi, Pune, Soil and Rajastan. That's the best driving I have seen.
Yeah, those cities are megapolis so that is a different level of driving
@@rohan_3128 makes sense.
come to kolkata, you would be crying
The horning is like the hazard theory test 🤣🤣
8:48 lol ive never heard Pin Swear before...thats how you know the driving suprised him😂
Don't want to be mean but it just confuses me that some places function like this. Just don't get how they have no sense of danger.
Living on the egde
Extreme Poverty takes morality and discipline out of people. For past 2 century indians lived in extreme poverty. It's just 1 decade since when number of middle class people have overtaken poor class in india, so now upcoming generation follow more rules
I learnt to drive and passed my test in the UK (Wolverhampton test centre, same as where my man Pin teaches). But then I moved to Pakistan for a few years, and that’s where I matured as a driver. So now being back in the UK and driving, it feels really weird following the driving rules and having to give way to everyone 😂
Are you in Londonistan currently?
True 💯🤣
@@manikyumlonhindustan
Please don't drive like you were driving in Pakistan, we like people following the rules here.
Great fun! We're headed to India this year. We're not even going to attempt driving, but I can't wait to be a passenger! LoL
Like in Vietnam. No road signs at all.
if you can drive in India you can probably drive anywhere in the world
You cant
You're enjoying with that horn, don't you? 😂😭😭
*aren't you
Every ones gangsta until they drive in India 😂
Wow, what a crazy country. You have to be on the ball,otherwise you’d be dead or others. Though vehicles pulling out in front of you at junctions is the norm here in the U.K.
This is probably the first time this car and the people on the road have seen turn signals in action, lmao
i agree the fact that Indians do not follow traffic rules, and i appreciate showing it on the social media because people atleast get ashamed and follow rules but apart from that show the good things of india as well, and stop demeaning the country before others.
Your cousin was awesome, cool video.
Absolutly love that you time stamp stuff keep it up my friend 👍
We live in a special country , where rules are meant to be broken
Honestly rules suck anyway
That drive tells our driving sense to the fullest.
This is how the driving will be in the whole India!
I think you drove in a village or very small town that's why there was no traffic. You have to drive in big cities to get the real vibe of indian 🚦 traffic.
Unfortunately this reckless attitude now prevails in large parts of the UK
Too many 'Stanis here that's why
@@jjassy752Bloody shame that is
@@jjassy752this is in india 😂. The jealousy is real with this one.
Reckless eh? Don't forget those white chavvy boy racers in town centres!
He is not lying about using the horn. I have driven in Pakistan may times and people don’t care if they get ran over
Same in my state Rajasthan india people don't care about anything it's just drive and come back alive or die on road 😂
Indians are accustomeed and adept at handling multiple road hazards...If you can drive safely in India..you can drive anywhere in the world and pass driving tests in every country.
If you can drive in India , then you can drive anywhere in the world
This is a complete shock 😲 I cannot belive how they drive over there
By actually not caring too much 😢
You should go and drive in Bangalore to get a taste of the ultimate driving test!
Ciekawe, jak Pan poradzi sobie z jazdą w Polsce 🤔? Chętnie bym obejrzał filmik i pozdrawiam z Polski 😃
Hahaha pozdrawiam
romania is the worst
Is the horn noise less aggressive in Indian cars? I swear the UK horn sounds much sharper/less friendly
There's 80DB sound limit and specified horn for each type of vehicle
I love how instead of trying to fix the societal factor of why Indians horn so much they went "ah screw it, just make the horn quieter for them"
During lock downs I learnt driving watching your videos, but I must say the roads you chose to show India are like lock down streets, empty and pose no challenge to even a beginner. Please, come to Kolkata ( Calcutta) and do a video during pick hours between Dakshineswar to Tollygunj, It'll be a real fun. I can't give you my car, but I'd arrange an old car for you.
bro i guarantee this is the same happening in Indonesia! come try it
one of the reasons lorry drivers in india drive in the right side on highway, cause people there be coming fast/without looking from left, so if a lorry is being driven on the left and suddenly someone comes by joining the highway, it's going to be a head on collision.
No need to unfollow rules, if they are honking, let them know by hand to pass first.
And lol, when I learnt to ride a car, I had less anxiety that this instructor. Once you understand the behaviour of traffic, you adopt to it quickly. It's just happens subconsciously.
If a person can drive in India ,he/she can drive anywhere in the world
I've been to Mumbai and Gurgaon and the driving there is just as bad if not worse in a lot of cases. I would not drive there if my life depended on it, but I took an uber every day to go to work and every single time the driver was breaking the rules like going on the wrong side of the road on a dual carriageway, ignoring red lights, ignoring priority at roundabouts, etc.. I have never been as scared for my life as those uber trips! The horn is also much more common in the big cities, it's almost like a constant background noise no matter where you are.
To ignore something you need to know its existence. 99.9999% people in India do not know rules of roundabout.
If You can drive in India you can drive anywhere
It's respectful because he also entered the G.T Road (National Highway) which is a very dangerous place to drive.
he got a real Indian nikka in his car
09:20 slow lane is fast lane due to a reason/problem in india, actually their is no proper footpath/sidewalk at most of the places and no proper partition also between people walking and the left side of highways, and if some slow vehicle(ex. truck) wants to cruise at a slow speed peacefully then they have to move sticking with the divider(and thats now become a habit too). if someone sees a place where people are not walking on left, you overtake the truck from left. if you are a motorcyclist, then you can easily overtake from left. overtaking from left is not very ideal, but thats due to poor markings/partitions, almost non existent footpaths. Imagine that a truck is moving on the left lane, and suddenly there are pedestrians walking on the left side, and the same time a big bus decides to overtake from right, then that truck is sandwiched between pedestrians and bus, creating a very dangerous situation. So, the onus of taking care of not hitting pedestrians while overtaking is on the overtaking bus driver, and the truck driver can keep moving sticking to the divider peacefully without thinking.
Now I'll wait video when your cousing come to UK and trying to drive from your place to city centre.
Trust me Guys i recently moved from india(bangalore) to Australia for short time , my blood pressure level has been reduced drastically only because of the disciplined traffic
If the trucks dont "hog"the fast lane. They'll be stuck longer than you. So they just keep right (Except on the now expressways which are not becoming pretty common) and it's pretty efficient for state highways and stuff
Interesting to watch. At least everyone is friendly, which makes the experience much nicer. I expected a few animals to pop up from nowhere onto the road to make it even more challenging. Back where I come from in Southern Africa, you sometimes find donkeys and cows lying on the road. I wonder what happens if there is a collision between cars. Do people have insurance in India?
What is Insurance?
yes we definitely have insurance, its enforceable by law and heavily punishable if you dont.
@bibaswanmukherjee7237 thanks for that. It's great that people have to insurance.
yeah motor bikes and cars all have to be insured@@ernestmfakudze
I live in North India Rajasthan We have no rules here even police here don't wear helmets and seatbelts. Everyday people rams their motorcycle and cars on animals and people's 😂
yo my driving test is in 3 days, i did 4 hours of driving with the instructor and way way more with my family, i hope i will pass it, my instructor told my that i was perfect on everything so it gave me a bit of comfort, lesgo
Goodluck and you got this!
@@EliteCheese i sadly didnt, i did a stupid error at the very end and she didnt gave me the licence :( one month and ill try again
@@gigibroieddi6651 more week to go. You got this mate!
@@gigibroieddi665I passed last week 4th try. Don’t beat yourself up over it. Whatever your mistakes were just practice again and again with your instructor until you feel more confident. You will smash it lad. Good luck.
@@mythicaldragon2260 ty brother
@01:45 - It is a rule and by law that front seat passenger and driver are required to wear seatbelts. His claim of 'no need to wear seat belt' is absurd
Its not absurd. He never said its legal to not wear a seat belt, he just said you don't need to which is true because its rarely enforced. Being from pakistan when I go the driver and front passenger only ever wear their seatbelts when we're reaching the toll plaza cause the bloke inside checks 😂
@@messismo1058it get enforced. You will be fined. Maybe depends on the region and attitude of local police.
this is driving on expert mode😂
First minute says it's all. It's highest selling accessory in India just to shut the seat belt warning
Pin's punjabi is awesome yo hear❤😂😅
"the roads are now definetly improved" - 3 sec later he drives on a road where he dosent know if he sits on the front or the back seat from being slammed around
Them -
It seems like crossroads..
Us -
Arey yeh toh wahi Chauraha hai na?
Woah that's Phagwara In Punjab lived there for few years small town but amazing people.
And traffic is low there compared to Jalandhar/Chandigarh.
5:42 using windshield wiper lever instead of indicator signal lever, I do that all the time when I drive in India. 😂😂
Ong outside of Kerala it’s crazy. Sikkimese people are so kind you gotta se their traffic and how respectful they are.
This is nt kerala mate
@@dilllu4444 ik
I live in Thailand, this is like Thailand but slower and more chaos and A LOT of horn.
Pin Binning is punjabi, didn’t know that, only realised it when I saw Nakodar written on one of those sign boards..😊
In kerala, india you need to wear seat belt, helmet (including passenger). There are 700 plus Additional Ai camera
wow crazy traffic Indian also Africa is same one Kenya oh my God see😂😂😂
On Kenyan roads, you are actually 5 times more likely to die than on Indian roads. Due to accidents I mean.
But I've heard that in Ethiopia driving is way better than India.
I don't know but somehow i'm good love in safe mature driving i always wear seatbelts, use indicators, follow lane guidance, drive safely.
What I found most crazy is there are so many motorcyclists and no one is wearing a helmet.
and half of the motorcyclist are madams who are wearing dresses, not like the usual motorcyclist
I think Goa is the only state in India where almost all the people wear helmets, don't know much about other states
@@siddhantnaik9011in Karnataka people make fun of the person who wears a helmet , so you can imagine how many people wear them
You want us to mess our hair up"" That's ridiculous
1.5 billion, natural population control
Driving on indian roads is survival game.
Whoever knows how to drive in India can drive anywhere in the world.
Forigner after driving on indian roads: I'll never dare to drive it again😯😅
I would invite you to drive in North-East India. Although it's a hilly region and not the most developed parts of India, but people follow the traffic rule better than rest of India, as my experience.
I'm living in the north east rn(shifted recently) and it's way worse here imo
@@aimy5637 where do you live?
@@STARK50 eastern part of Assam, almost touching arunachal and nagaland, idk about dibrugarh but the roads there some places are bad, meanwhile places in and around tinsukia the law related to traffic is just outright bad including the roads, feels like jharkhand and bihar where ppl don't give one shit about it
Also just recently I visited dibrugarh rail station and there was no barricade there for ppl and bike crossing the tracks...(there's a bike path made at end of station)
Ive lived in Siliguri and Kolkata and Delhi and so my standards would be based on those places, mainly Siliguri though since other two are metrocities
As a NRI, this was entertaining to watch 😂
same lol
nri??@@Teja
@@titanszs non resident indian
@@Teja god dammnn look at that youtube handle. nice
@@oatx i dont know if u r joking or serious lol
He never drove in reality he was only expert in simulation.
Maybe you can come to Taiwan and be shocked to find that there are similar places.
You were in Phagwara Right Khera Village
Driving in india is crazy