Recommended again. I did that this Sunday when it snowed here in Chicago just to brush up a bit and get a feel for how my car behaves on snow again.
Recommended again. I did that this Sunday when it snowed here in Chicago just to brush up a bit and get a feel for how my car behaves on snow again.
There are a lot of parts to your question.
That's true, I laughed pretty good at this one.
It does in a car that has the rear wheels driven (RWD or AWD) but you have to initiate the turn first.
While it's true that FWD cars are front heavy, they are not the only ones that are front heavy. Basically everything that isn't mid or rear engined is front heavy. Pick up trucks are actually much worse than most FWD cars for weight distribution.
You say this but my FWD Ford Escort does pretty well in snow rallies.
1.) Nevermind
3.) Abandon vehicle
Racescort666 recommends this post. You are correct. Many people panic and brake. This may lock their tires (which makes things much worse) but at the very least it weight transfers to the front. When the rear tires are unloaded they have less traction the car spins.
+1 these guys were the cowboys of gaming. I cracked up at the system admin calling him up to yell at him.
Nitrous purge?
I have a "friend" on Facebook that believes in 9/11 conspiracy. This person needs to be defriended but I'm waiting for the moon landing hoax shit to start.
This is something I was wondering as well.
James Bond approves.
Martini?
What a tease on the preview picture. I wanted to see how that car ended up on it's nose.
This is pretty impressive. Reminds me of rallying in the snow.
As soon as I read she had an engineering degree I decided she was instantly a good choice. I hate it when management isn't technical.
This is my intended next car. I'm not a middle aged man going through a midlife crisis. I'm single, in my 20s, a nice guy, college educated, not a lot of debt, and have a good job.
Add to this: you should have a winter survival kit in your car. Jumper cables, space blanket, non-perishable food, flashlight, phone charger, spare gloves, spare sweatshirt (or sweater), hand warmers, safety triangles. There are lots of good kits out there.