MentalIlness
Platinum Member
- Nov 22, 2009
- 2,383
- 11
- 76
Congratulations. You're a better driver in the snow than 99% of all Virginia drivers I've encountered. But, based on your comments, you sound like you suck at driving on snow/don't know what you're talking about. (but suck less than the rest of the idiots in VA.)
I'm in western NY. Snowbelt area. 1 foot of snow and school is still open. For my first 5 or 6 years of teaching, I commuted down an interstate highway. despite the passing lane sometimes not being plowed before I went to work, I can't recall ever having to slow down to less than 55 mph, except on 2 or 3 occasions when we had freezing rain & severe black ice problems. With a little experience (which you must not have), you feel when a tire loses traction & simply let off on the gas for a second. Or, you pump the gas peddle to help with acceleration.
For the last 5 years, I've had to drive down a winding country highway with a lot of bends in it. Occasionally I have to slow down to 45.
You think you know how to drive because you can go 30mph on a highway, probably with a death grip on the steering wheel? Please.
You seem to have reading comprehension issues so here I'll ignore the first part of your post (Since you obviously don't know what you are talking about) and link a relevant quote in right here in response to your second part.
I drive a 2010 Tacoma 4x4 and I didn't need 4x4, A-Trac, or my Rear Differential Locker. I didn't have any extra weight in the back and I made it back with virtually no slipping/fish tailing (Some courtesy of the wonder that is ABS and Limited Slip Differential). Why are there so many people who don't understand the principle of Winter Driving?-Kevin
1. M+S tyres
2. never offset the balance unless you absolutely need to load that way, the engineers that made your POS Tacoma weren't retarded, they made is so that it would be stable, by putting more weight on the rear wheels you'll ensure that if you skid, you will NOT be able to steer it up by hitting the gas and countersteering nor by letting the gas go and countersteering, you will swerve all over the road and end up in the ditch, that is, if you didn't load it enough to make it understeer instead.
Don't think you're a great driver just because you are so careful that everyone arounds you get frustrated at your bad driving habits either, it's ok to feel the road off a few times and know how to drive proper if you got proper winter tyres on.
Neither is snow what LSD is for.
Even in states like Wisconsin, Massachusetts, and Colorado??
