Printable Version | Subscribe | Add to Favourites
<<  1    2  >>
New Topic New Poll New Reply
Author: Subject: Driving in the snow.
Ninehigh

posted on 20/12/10 at 09:34 PM Reply With Quote
Driving in the snow.

I think that we, as a responsible community of good drivers, should be able to cobble together some tips for driving in these conditions. I'm going to stick them on my bookface and such later on so if anyone has any other hints please post them here.

1. Slow down, you're driving on ice ffs!
2. Take it as a given your brakes don't work, so don't rely on having to use them.
3. Same with steering, no sharp movements.
4. Four wheel drive helps with grip, but not braking.
5. Highway code says your stopping distance is TEN times normal. That's ten times normal, not your normal 6 inches!
6. Start gently, wheelspin is for 17 year old gimps in Corsas
7. Make sure ALL of your window is defrosted, the Coppers don't like you being a lazy git and scraping just enough to see ahead.


Anything else?






View User's Profile View All Posts By User U2U Member
BigFaceDave

posted on 20/12/10 at 09:36 PM Reply With Quote
You dont need your fog lights on!
View User's Profile E-Mail User View All Posts By User U2U Member
PSpirine

posted on 20/12/10 at 09:41 PM Reply With Quote
The brakes bit is the most important point for me - I drive 18 miles to work, and aside from the queue at the end I manage to go the ENTIRE way without touching the brake pedal once! (I test the brakes on an empty straight to make sure htey're still there). Use your gears! Obviously autos won't be able to do this, so use your brakes gently.

PLEASE use hazards if you're going up a hill which you have doubts as to whether you'll go up or not - I saw a Discovery almost wipe out a car behind it as it went for a hill and proceeded to start sliding back down. Equally, if there's a hill, wait at the bottom till the car in front is through.

Keep in mind you're most likely to slide to the outside of the corner, so when your lane is the inside one, take a bit more car and slow down to avoid oncoming cars.

If you're really stuck, let the tyres down. I spent 15 minutes trying to get up a hill today, then let the tyres down to 15psi and got up no problem - BUT REMEMBER they're low on air, and don't drive at 70mph on a clear motorway after without re-inflating (foot pumps are surprisingly efficient)

Just cause others may be driving like idiots, doesn't mean you should too. As long as you get yourself and your passengers safely to your destination, that's all that matters.

Ensure you've got your fuel tank topped up!

View User's Profile View All Posts By User U2U Member
craig1410

posted on 20/12/10 at 09:44 PM Reply With Quote
Yeah, find a big carpark or a quiet road and get some sideways action while you still can!

Too many people haven't got a clue how to respond when their car starts to skid and with electronic systems in cars these days you can't even generalise by telling people to steer into the skid.

A few other tips in addition to yours:

1. Snow has more grip than ice - if you are struggling for either traction, steering or braking then try moving onto the snow.
2. Listen to your tyres and feel for vagueness in the steering, these are the warning signs of lack of grip.
3. If you get stuck then try letting a bit of air out of the tyres. Particularly in soft snow. Not too much though and make sure you have a pump handy in case you overdo it.
4. Have a shovel in the boot and all the usual stuff (coat, hat, gloves, blanket)
5. Make sure you have extra petrol in reserve in case you get stuck and need to keep warm through the night.
6. Relax at the wheel - if you are tense then you won't react smoothly and quickly enough in the event of a skid.
7. Wot BigFaceDave says ^^^^^

View User's Profile Visit User's Homepage View All Posts By User U2U Member
MikeR

posted on 20/12/10 at 10:04 PM Reply With Quote
if you are trying to brake and its not working - stop trying to brake, drop the clutch the car will then probably steer as thats all the tyres have to do - now let go of the brakes and try again.

(ok, this works for me when i'm doing 5mph - never had to try it at 30mph).

make sure your washer fluid is topped up and its STRONG (so it won't freeze). Although don't expect it to work as the washer jets will probably have frozen.

View User's Profile View All Posts By User U2U Member
stevebubs

posted on 20/12/10 at 10:23 PM Reply With Quote
Simple...

If you don't know how, STAY AT BL#@DY HOME AND GET THE D@RN3D BUS

[Edited on 20/12/10 by stevebubs]

View User's Profile E-Mail User View All Posts By User U2U Member
McLannahan

posted on 20/12/10 at 10:31 PM Reply With Quote
I get up the hills in and around here in first gear and no accelerator at all. Naturally the car pulls itself fowards and doesn't loose traction. Obviously don't dump the clutch but release it very slowly until the car moves on its own. Neighbours keep leaving their cars at the bottom of our hill. I just chugged up with no issues at all.






View User's Profile Visit User's Homepage View All Posts By User U2U Member
scootz

posted on 20/12/10 at 10:42 PM Reply With Quote
If you start sliding at speed and you just know it's going to end in tears, then steer clear of the brakes and take the drive away from the tyres. Clutch in, or auto stick to 'N'. All four wheels will thereafter find a similar speed and you may find that you have some steering again! Aim for something soft... and brace for impact!

PS - This may also help you out if you're fishtailing wildly on damp roads. Remove the drive and let the tyres sort themselves out... you'll stand a much better chance of getting things back under control!





It's Evolution Baby!

View User's Profile View All Posts By User U2U Member
skodaman

posted on 20/12/10 at 11:07 PM Reply With Quote
It's not that much fun driving on snow in the modern cars. ABS and traction control spoils it a lot. But at least the ABS doesn't work on the handbrake.





Skodaman

View User's Profile E-Mail User Visit User's Homepage View All Posts By User U2U Member
Peteff

posted on 20/12/10 at 11:09 PM Reply With Quote
If the wheels spin in first try second or third gear and try to pull away just above stalling speed.





yours, Pete

I went into the RSPCA office the other day. It was so small you could hardly swing a cat in there.

View User's Profile View All Posts By User U2U Member
zilspeed

posted on 20/12/10 at 11:13 PM Reply With Quote
To get the car moving. Lift the clutch, you don't need any throttle.

At all.

None.

Stop giving it too much beans, seriously.

Oh, FFS, do you want me to show you ?

Oh, ok then, fill your boots, on you go. WTF do I know anyway.

Great, now it's got a nice wedge of snow and ice in front of and behind the driven wheels, well done.
Now you're well and truly stuck.



Regarding steering and brakes.

FFS stop braking and turning in all at the same time.

You can do one or the other, but please stop doing both at the same time.

Oh and when it goes wrong, don't brake, steer arrrroooooouuuunnnnddddddd the accident and continue on your way.






All of the above are the reasons why I'm not a good teacher








View User's Profile E-Mail User View All Posts By User U2U Member
ashg

posted on 20/12/10 at 11:22 PM Reply With Quote
put a shovel in the boot. simples

you will either use it to dig the car out or to bash the idiot that hit you up the back.





Anything With Tits or Wheels Will cost you MONEY!!

Haynes Roadster (Finished)
Exocet (Finished & Sold)
New Project (Started)

View User's Profile View All Posts By User U2U Member
craig1410

posted on 20/12/10 at 11:24 PM Reply With Quote
Not sure I agree with the "depress the clutch" method of regaining control, I much prefer the FWD method of using a bit of power to steer the front back to where I want it to be. Of course this takes a bit of practice to avoid fish-tailing which takes me back to my original advice to find a big carpark and slide it around a bit to get the feel. Nothing more satisfying than a controlled drift in the snow and the speed is so low that you can do it in almost complete safety.

In my opinion it should be mandatory to have an advanced driving certificate before being allowed out in the snow. Stick everyone in either a MK2 Ford Escort or a BL Mini on a skid pan for an hour and they will soon learn how to control a car! Either that or mandate snow socks/chains like some of the europeans do.

View User's Profile Visit User's Homepage View All Posts By User U2U Member
bmseven

posted on 20/12/10 at 11:43 PM Reply With Quote
If your in a understeer situation in a fwd more or less power is not going to help but dipping the clutch will give you some steering back and its pretty instant
View User's Profile Visit User's Homepage View All Posts By User U2U Member
DorsetStrider

posted on 21/12/10 at 12:47 AM Reply With Quote
I have to disagree with the letting air out of your tyres advice. This will give you LESS grip on snow and ice NOT more... If anything you want to over inflate the tyres slightly (no more than 10%) to open out the tread slightly. Underinflation works on sand/gravel... Over inflation is better for snow and ice. Don't beleive me look at what the rally boys do.

Other top tips...

Carry a bag of cat litter in the boot.
make sure the tank is full... if you do get well and truely stuck at least you'll be able to keep warm (ish) plus the added weight will help.
SLOW DOWN!
Avoid using the brakes but do make sure to just touch the pedal to let the pillock behind you know you're slowing down.
Keep a few bars of chocolate and a warm coat (preferably reflective) in the boot.
If the worst does happen and you crash and write off your car remember that's not the WORST thing that could have happened... cars are replaceable... people arnt!





Who the f**K tightened this up!

View User's Profile View All Posts By User U2U Member
RazMan

posted on 21/12/10 at 01:30 AM Reply With Quote
Clear the snow off your roof before you set out - I have seen this many, many times and when the brakes are applied, all the snow slides off the (now warm) roof and covers the windscreen just when you need to see what you are trying not to hit!

Same goes for the windows - I have seen idiots driving with all the side and rear windows completely covered, and a windscreen wiper going like crazy to try and clear the front! Utterly stupid!

Carry a candle or two. No, I'm serious - it's pathetic warmth could mean the difference between life and death if you get stranded in the car.





Cheers,
Raz

When thinking outside the box doesn't work any more, it's time to build a new box

View User's Profile E-Mail User Visit User's Homepage View All Posts By User U2U Member
morcus

posted on 21/12/10 at 02:21 AM Reply With Quote
Carry some food, preferably something easy to eat and ration with a high energy content like Chocolate or biscuits and make sure you've got something to drink (Non Alcoholic), and don't leave it in the car when you get out as it won't be as good to you frozen.

If you can't make it back to your home, please be considerate about where you park, someone as left a car opposite my carpark entrance for the last 4 days and the way the bloke downstairs was trying to get out he's lucky it's not been crashed into.

Don't drive along at walking pace on clear bits of road, Especially don't do this if your driving at walking pace (or less) to somewhere you could have walked too (Like the school at the end of the street).

Carry a soft broom, it's the very best thing to get snow of the car. I bought one two weeks ago and it's not only saved me time but it saves my fingers from getting frozen. I've not had to use it for the purpose but a broom is also quite good for moving snow of the ground to get to harder ground.

One final one from me, If you've got a Robotised box with no torque converter, keep an eye on what gear it's in as mine has a habit of downshifting and spinning the wheels, If you catch it quickly you can shift up before it drops the clutch.





In a White Room, With Black Curtains, By the Station.

View User's Profile View All Posts By User U2U Member
bitsilly
Contributor






Posts 726
Registered 9/6/05
Member Is Offline

Photo Archive Go!
Building: Flexibility into my marriage, bless her!

posted on 21/12/10 at 09:09 AM Reply With Quote
We keep hearing on the radio that coppers are going to pull over drivers with snow on the roof, fine them and give 3 points.
Re the tyre pressure I find low pressure helps, and off roading we always reduced pressure for mud.
Does anyone remember Top Gear in the Artic, they ran their tyres extremly low. So low that they came off the rims easily. So they squirt them with lighter fuel and chuck in a match, a little like this:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OOf91WKZOYE
But they used much less and removed the bleedin' aerosol beforehand!

View User's Profile View All Posts By User U2U Member
MikeRJ

posted on 21/12/10 at 09:11 AM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Ninehigh
6. Start gently, wheelspin is for 17 year old gimps in Corsas



I took a friend home late last night and was getting wheel spin pulling off in second gear at idle!

[Edited on 21/12/10 by MikeRJ]

View User's Profile View All Posts By User U2U Member
johnemms

posted on 21/12/10 at 09:58 AM Reply With Quote
I think its great stuff..... Keep it coming !!

I'm having a wonderful time using all my driving skills for a refreshing change ....





View User's Profile E-Mail User View All Posts By User U2U Member
02GF74

posted on 21/12/10 at 11:38 AM Reply With Quote
1. If you have stoppped and have no grip whilst gently trying to pull away, don't floor the accelerator making the wheels spin as it is no good. Instead try to move forwards a tiny bit whilst wiggling the steering wheel from side to side (assumes FWD), drop the clutch to allow yourself to fall back and repeat so you "rock" yourself out of the stuckiness.

2. If have a can of anti-freeze left over from 2 years ago, check there still is propellant in it before you have to use it.

3. Clear wipers of snow and ice before setting off - the ice will have stuck them to the screen so when you try to use them nothing happens or worse the arm comes loose off the spindle.

4. Do not use the washers until the screen is fully warmed up or it will freeze. To stop vapour freezing on the inside, open the windows (yes it will be cold) until the heater is up to temperatrue to clear the screen.

5. If all else fails and you have to walk away, make sure you face the traffic in case a numpty in a 4wd BWM comes carreering off the road towards you - you will not hear the wheels screeeeeeeeeeeech.

6. If you are stuck for a long time, do not be tempted to eat yellow or brown snow.






View User's Profile View All Posts By User U2U Member
scootz

posted on 21/12/10 at 12:13 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by craig1410
Not sure I agree with the "depress the clutch" method of regaining control, I much prefer the FWD method of using a bit of power to steer the front back to where I want it to be. Of course this takes a bit of practice to avoid fish-tailing which takes me back to my original advice to find a big carpark and slide it around a bit to get the feel. Nothing more satisfying than a controlled drift in the snow and the speed is so low that you can do it in almost complete safety.

In my opinion it should be mandatory to have an advanced driving certificate before being allowed out in the snow. Stick everyone in either a MK2 Ford Escort or a BL Mini on a skid pan for an hour and they will soon learn how to control a car! Either that or mandate snow socks/chains like some of the europeans do.


Your 'power-drifting' technique is indeed great fun in a controlled environment such as a snowy car park and yes, it can make you feel like a Driving-God (when you're 18)! Not much cop to the average motorist when the sh*t hits the fan on a public highway that's covered in snow / ice and you're carrying a bit of speed though! To regain control in these conditions, you really want all four wheels moving at the same speed and under their own steam. Remember - this is in a do or die situation... not just a ickle wee slide with space aplenty!

Of course there will be exceptions depending on individual circumstance and also your driving skill levels, but this is general advice as not everyone is Colin MacRae!





It's Evolution Baby!

View User's Profile View All Posts By User U2U Member
David Jenkins

posted on 21/12/10 at 12:19 PM Reply With Quote
I had a pillock driving on my back bumper yesterday morning - until he saw me hanging the car's tail out around a roundabout and decided that staying back a bit was a good idea! I wasn't hooning - I was doing about 10mph - but it was very slippery.

Pleased to say that I caught the slide immediately...

Oh - obligatory tip - if you have an auto box:

If you start to spin the wheels, a light touch on the throttle then taking your foot off will start the car creeping, which is often enough to move you forward.

Shifting from reverse to forward and letting it creep each way may well get you moving.

If you have a semi-manual option (like my Focus) then it's useful for holding your speed down on icy descents - just select a gear that holds you back a bit.

And if you don't have an auto:

Jerky or snatched gear changes are just as likely to put you in a ditch as sharp braking.

[Edited on 21/12/10 by David Jenkins]






View User's Profile Visit User's Homepage View All Posts By User U2U Member
craig1410

posted on 21/12/10 at 01:25 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by scootz
Your 'power-drifting' technique is indeed great fun in a controlled environment such as a snowy car park and yes, it can make you feel like a Driving-God (when you're 18)! Not much cop to the average motorist when the sh*t hits the fan on a public highway that's covered in snow / ice and you're carrying a bit of speed though! To regain control in these conditions, you really want all four wheels moving at the same speed and under their own steam. Remember - this is in a do or die situation... not just a ickle wee slide with space aplenty!

Of course there will be exceptions depending on individual circumstance and also your driving skill levels, but this is general advice as not everyone is Colin MacRae!


Lighten up Scootz, it was a tongue in cheek response not a "do or die" response... No need to get all health and safety.
No delusions of being a driving god or the next Colin McRae either, just a driving enthusiast like most of us here I expect.

Having said that, I stand by what I said about people needing to know what a skid feels like in order to be able to respond correctly in one of the do or die moments you mention. No different to someone thinking you can learn self defence from a book - until you actually feel what it's like to have someone attack you, whether in the gym or on the street, then you simply won't respond effectively and adrenalin will act against you rather than in your favour. In a real emergency it will often feel like it is in slow motion due to heightened senses so drifting slowly around a car park is not a waste of time. This is much different to a snap oversteer moment on sticky Tarmac which will give even professional drivers a hard time. Snow and ice skids tend to be much easier to handle than dry weather skids in my opinion, unless of course you are travelling at really silly speeds for the conditions.

As for my earlier comments about not agreeing with the "dip clutch" method of regaining control in a slide, I wasn't referring to an understeer situation I was thinking more of a tail slide where opposite lock and some gentle throttle (not a power drift) will pull the nose back into line. This situation will commonly occur even in a FWD car where the driver lifts off the throttle at the onset of understeer and then loses the back end. The fact is there is no one piece of advice you can give someone because it depends on too many factors such as driven wheels, reason for slide, road camber, available space to correct slide, electronic assists available etc etc.

Cheers,
Craig.

View User's Profile Visit User's Homepage View All Posts By User U2U Member
scootz

posted on 21/12/10 at 01:32 PM Reply With Quote
Sorry Craig... didn't realise that my post had come over 'heavy'. Certainly not the intention.





It's Evolution Baby!

View User's Profile View All Posts By User U2U Member
<<  1    2  >>
New Topic New Poll New Reply


go to top






Website design and SEO by Studio Montage

All content © 2001-16 LocostBuilders. Reproduction prohibited
Opinions expressed in public posts are those of the author and do not necessarily represent
the views of other users or any member of the LocostBuilders team.
Running XMB 1.8 Partagium [© 2002 XMB Group] on Apache under CentOS Linux
Founded, built and operated by ChrisW.