Originally posted by: Windogg
Originally posted by: PreDatoR
windogg how much crack do you smoke... while 4wd or awd offers no additional braking abilities it does however offer a hell of a lot more traction for acceleration and overall control of the vehicle... i've owned FWD AWD RWD and 4WD vehicles and RWD flat ass sucks in the snow... 99% of driving on a slick road is common sense. the other 1% is balls which most have neither of...
Last time I checked, a AWD, 4WD, FWD, or RWD (given the same type of tire) will all go skidding off a icy road equally well. Too many tards out there go, "I have 4WD/AWD so I can take that curve at 60MPH over a snow covered highway." Perhaps you are thinking of starting from stop then yes AWD/4WD will provide a benefit. Dry pavement is another matter.
I have owned two full time 4WD vehicles (1995 Jeep Grand Cherokee Limited and a 1997 Toyota Land Cruiser 40th Anniversary Edition) as well as two AWD vehicles (2001 BMW X5 4.4 and a 2002 BMW X5 4.6is). As for RWD, I've owne/own a 2001 BMW M5 and a 2003 BMW M5. Yes I did take the two full time 4WD trucks off road and do know how to properly handle them in slick conditions. To generically say 4WD/AWD is always better is a silly blanket statement. When I was waiting for my winter rims/tires on the X5 4.6, I chose to drive the M5 with dedicated winter tires. why? Because the stock 4.6 tires have zero snow ability and the rubber compund was not meant for snow and ice.
One of the Suburus I saw in a ditch was a nice WRX. Fat lot of good the AWD him. I could only assume he was running his stock performance tires. AWD did not bring him through that curve.