My favourite is watching guys in 4X4 pickup trucks fishtailing all over the place on icy roads.
Even worse are the people who severely underestimate their performance envelope and you're stuck behind them doing 8MPH on a straight road with a sprinkle of snow.
What amazes me is how people with AWD and other fancy features still have trouble in the snow. For many years I drove 2 wheel drive with summer tires throughout winter and I was fine. Just need to not do anything stupid like slam the brakes or try to turn going too fast. AWD and such will help you be able to go a bit faster without slipping but it's not magic, either.
The majority of people with AWD seem to believe since their car has little trouble going 0-60 in snow, it has just as little going 60-0. Every big snow, I see at least one AWD car (usually an SUV) in a wreck.
As long as you fill your tires to sidewall pressure, you'll be fine.
or trying to take a turn and watching the inside rear wheel spin fruitlessly as they slowly move forward
This.
They don't understand that when you lock your hubs in 4WD, you're actually taking a chance on losing traction if traveling at higher rates of speed. You see this most often when people are in 4WD on highways... This is the one place that AWD is superior to even 4WD because of the advanced limited slip differentials they typically have....but alas, you still have the same braking technologies.
If you know how to effectively downshift in an AWD or 4WD, you can potentially stop in a shorter distance while maintaining control, but all it takes is having more than 1 tire break loose and without limited slip, you can be up the creek (or down) quickly.
As long as you fill your tires to sidewall pressure, you'll be fine.
Lower PSI creates a wider contact patch for the tire increasing surface are and traction. I dont recommend airing down on the street though![]()
Since you're new here...
"Fill the tires to sidewall" is an inside joke around here. There was a member who went around insisting that you should always fill the tires to the maximum pressure listed on the sidewall and completely ignore the numbers listed in the car's owners manual.
He was so insistent about it that he brought it up in nearly every thread and now "inflate the tires to sidewall" is jokingly given as the solution to pretty much every automotive problem.
ZV
Generally you should ignore the manual, god knows if your tires on the car currently match what was on it from the factory.
Even with different tires, you should always use the recommended pressures in the manual as a starting point. It will be at least close to optimum for any tire with even remotely similar performance characteristics.
ZV
