The throttle is
a small hand lever sprouting out the right side of the steering column.
Not exact matches
To make this ride perfect, I would add a
small zipper pocket in the back of the seat and make the recline one -
hand lever recline.
(This is not to say that there are not some Thai women whose
hands dance on the
small pole, but Thai massage as a specialty frequently uses arms and legs as
levers to apply traction - not friction.)
There is also a
small 10 - position
lever next to the
hand brake; moving it adds or takes away only rear brake pressure, which could certainly help during long runs when the front tires start to go away.
Cabin storage up front is limited to a
small bin behind the gear
lever, while the glovebox on right -
hand drive cars is
smaller than left -
hand drive models as the fuse box is located behind it; Peugeot hasn't switched it over in swapping the steering wheel from one side to the other.
With one
hand wrapped around a new steering wheel that's
smaller and thicker - rimmed, and the other twitching toward the at - the - ready shift
lever, a driver can't help but practice quick - draw shifts during a passing maneuver.
There's a story I recall about some famous and brilliant mathematician — perhaps Norbert Wiener — who rarely took his nose out of a book and who didn't like to waste time: he would read while walking to and from the classroom (or perhaps his office) but have his arm out such that with a
small part of his (very big) brain he could count the doorframes as they were ticked off against his
hand; at the right count, his wrist would stiffen, and with his arm as a
lever, rotate himself into the room still reading.