Bias for drive / power set too much to the back for extreme conditions and your wheel/tyre size?
If I see any more snow this weekend I'm going to get the 18's shod with proper winter tyres and get them back on.
Bias for drive / power set too much to the back for extreme conditions and your wheel/tyre size?
If I see any more snow this weekend I'm going to get the 18's shod with proper winter tyres and get them back on.
How much are people paying for their Wintrac's?
I've seen them for £600 fully fitted for 225/40/R18.
How many people have bothered with different wheels - steelies or otherwise?
http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=6af_1263062691
Someone from the forums?
If it's that slippery and you don't have proper winter tyres, how stupid one must be to try driving on it?
http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=6af_1263062691
Someone from the forums?
If it's that slippery and you don't have proper winter tyres, how stupid one must be to try driving on it?
Not wanting to sound like an old fart (but utlimately seeming to), but...
Have to agree that it's *mostly* down to driver technique and of course, experience... Being the wrong-side-of-50 means that "severe" (yeah, right...) weather conditions are not new to me or the wife. I remember when they used to show Road Safety ads on the telly in winter advising how to drive in snow and ice - they made a lot of sense and I still remember their mantra: high gear as poss / low revs as poss (just above stalling) / plenty of stopping space / plenty of space to manouevre if the guy in front gets stuck / etc etc.
We live on a road with an incline - not steep - but have a very steep drive to get up to the house. Neither the wife in her Yaris D4D nor myself have had any problems, neither getting out and to / from work or visiting / shopping... But the neighbours, mostly young-ish (who park on the road outside) and deliveries are a joke: 1st gear, foot flat on floor, spin tyres until the engine is screaming and tyres are smoking. Which of course "polishes" the road surface and ice to make it more difficult for everyone else!
And then of course they moan it's the Government's / Council's / Gritter's / Snowplough's fault... If I say anything, they just say: "Yeah, but your's is a diesel..." I don't mention the 15 yrs on m/cycles in all weathers or the similar number in petrol powered cars...
1. Plan your journey (avoid hills / side roads where poss.).
A colleauge has a MK1 Leon 1.4, and it's not bad at all in the snow on (relatively) narrow tyres.My MK1 was far superior - granted, there are plenty of reasons as to why - wheel width & torque primarily.