There are two ways.
The first way is to be an engineer, the kind of person who understands how cars work and how to adjust suspensions, etc. -- car manufacturers hire people like this to drive cars and recommend adjustments. Of course, that would just be a small aspect of the work; mostly, you'd be working on the engineering efforts for the car.
The second way is to become a journalist, aiming to write for an automotive publication. You can't write about 'em without driving 'em, so you'll be taking a different car home more or less each week to learn enough about it to write an article. Again, however, this isn't the majority of time spent on your job; mostly, you'd be writing about cars.
2007-02-15 12:23:20
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answer #1
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answered by big_bowl_of_meat 2
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If you are asking about simply getting to drive new cars from time to time versus a full-time position, the car manufacturers send letters to some current owners of their products.
This past summer, I was sent a few letters asking if I wanted to participate in driving some new cars for a manufacturer. I was also asked if I wanted to simply look at and evaluate concept designs but not drive vehicles. There was a small stipend for doing either.
2007-02-15 13:31:07
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answer #2
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answered by Lawrence R 2
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If you're really serious about it you'll most likely have to work for a publication that reviews cars...even then it will be pretty tough unless you know people.
2007-02-15 11:39:48
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answer #3
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answered by jow p 1
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Only death row inmates get those cool jobs.
2007-02-15 11:38:13
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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go to the dealer
2007-02-22 14:41:34
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answer #5
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answered by jerry 7
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when you find out let me know too.
2007-02-15 11:49:10
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answer #6
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answered by mister ss 7
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