As above. My two sons learned to drive the 2a without great problems (no problem for me - after the model T the next two vehicles I learned to drive in had no synchro on any gears, and I had owned Series 1,2,2a in the sixties after driving one in vacation work in the late fifties).
Your advice to never engage first (or reverse) except when stopped is very good. The reason for this is that first and reverse are engaged by sliding gears, meaning only one tooth is engaged at a time, so that wear and damage from mismatched speeds is concentrated. Second gear is constant mesh, so it is engaged by a dog clutch, with the mismatch spread over about ten teeth at once. This is very tough, and damage is very unlikely.
The same applies to the transfer case - high range is constant mesh, low range is a sliding gear. Hence, there is almost no chance of damage changing from low to high if you screw up, but quite a chance of damage changing from high to low - don't try it until you are really expert at changing smoothly and noiselessly from low to high, and even then be wary - and there is almost nowhere where it is useful going from high to low.
Then when you are really expert, you can start split shifting - for example from low- fourth to high-second. And get even fancier if you have an overdrive! (but never use an overdrive in first or second - OK in low range third or fourth).
John
John
John
JDNSW
1986 110 County 3.9 diesel
1970 2a 109 2.25 petrol
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