Snowy Drive Home
#33
Three Wheelin'
Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: St Louis, Missouri, USA
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Anyone that says the 944 is terrible in the snow doesn't know...
PS.. if you ver get a chance to get in the snow with a true heavy 4x4 you might see the whole situation as a lot more comical. Sometimes, if I see kids in the car, I'll stop and pull them out of the ditch. My favorite was the lady that told me this wasn't supposed to happen bc her BMW had traction control.
PSS... We got snow this morning, did you know you can get ticketed in Illinois for helping someone to get out of the ditch? ...Bruce
#35
Any advice for someone who is driving not only a 944 but a manual for the 1st time in the snow. Before this i had a subaru outback so i never had problems with snow but this morning i was sideways pretty much the entire way to work and almost went into the ditch a few times. I wasn't going fast, in fact i was going very slow, 5mph or maybe 10. mostly in 1st gear. The roads were iced, like a skating rink iced.
soon as i got on the road and accelerated forward even very softly and slowly the back end began to slide to the other lane and as i tried to give it some gas to keep from sliding backwards and into the ditch the more it just slide sideways. So I backed off and just stayed at a steady low rpm and it regained control but i was pretty sure i was going to be in the ditch within the 1st 30seconds of leaving the house.
Also, how can i downshift without doing the same? When i downshifted to make a left turn my *** end was sliding to the right and to the ditch. I hadn't even really started to make the turn yet.
I have 15 inch wheels, just the standard 215/60/15 size tires, Goodyear Eagle GT all season, basically brand new too. But OMG it was like night and day compared to driving the outback last year.
the roads were clear by lunch but this morning and again tomorrow morning they will be solid ice again. It doesn't help that my city is ill prepared for snow/ice and the **** doesn't get cleared out until like noon.
Any advice would be much appreciated. I didn't think it was gonna be bad at all but it was BAD. Even considering walking to work tomorrow (I don't live far) but I'd rather not.
soon as i got on the road and accelerated forward even very softly and slowly the back end began to slide to the other lane and as i tried to give it some gas to keep from sliding backwards and into the ditch the more it just slide sideways. So I backed off and just stayed at a steady low rpm and it regained control but i was pretty sure i was going to be in the ditch within the 1st 30seconds of leaving the house.
Also, how can i downshift without doing the same? When i downshifted to make a left turn my *** end was sliding to the right and to the ditch. I hadn't even really started to make the turn yet.
I have 15 inch wheels, just the standard 215/60/15 size tires, Goodyear Eagle GT all season, basically brand new too. But OMG it was like night and day compared to driving the outback last year.
the roads were clear by lunch but this morning and again tomorrow morning they will be solid ice again. It doesn't help that my city is ill prepared for snow/ice and the **** doesn't get cleared out until like noon.
Any advice would be much appreciated. I didn't think it was gonna be bad at all but it was BAD. Even considering walking to work tomorrow (I don't live far) but I'd rather not.
#37
Team Owner
Join Date: Oct 2009
Location: one thousand, five hundred miles north of Ft. Lauderdale for the summer.
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drving from metrowest Boston to Miami last night was one for the ages...... upon reaching North Carolina, the ice started....
from about mile marker 170 to 80 here in NC it turned into an ice storm and just got worse and worse. 45 mph, 35, 30 mph down to 15 and 20 mph.... 90 miles of hell in about 3 and a half hours. 50 + accidents. first there was tons of cars passing me (i was going like 30) hen there were none. didn't take long to find out why. enter Darwin... they were all crashing.
i spun twice at 30 mph then 20 mph. i was in the passing lane facing oncoming traffic. lucky they were going slow too. got so bad, i drove in the break down lane about 1/3 of the way. figured i'd be in the clear by now, but now, the roads are totally impassable.
so, i'm done for the night. (that was about 1 a.m last night)
about an hour later, i decided to go bsck out.
being as stubborn as i am i decided to go back and drive for about 5 more hours and made about 130 more miles. the roads finally got passable after leaving North Carolina. the highway had become a ghost town, with almost no cars or trucks. and the ones that i did manage to see were going no more than about 35 mph. saw in total, about 70 accidents, during the entire length of north Carolina which took about 7 hours of driving, i saw many of cars that had gone off the road and couldn't get back on.... not all were bad, but many were, including people who somehow managed to cream each other, cars that went over into ravines and lots of rollovers. by the time i got to Florence, SC, my car was as one giant icicle, with about a half-inch thick coating of ice on the mirrors and spoiler. never knew this car could be driven this way, but it turns out 15-25 mph is possible, even on ice. toughest driving i've ever done. even beats the devil's spine in Durango and Sinaloa, Mex.
the reason i kept on going was that i dreaded the idea of driving today after all the ******** came out and would surely be driving too fast on some really bad roads. now that i'm in South Carolina the conditions should hopefully, be improving.
.
from about mile marker 170 to 80 here in NC it turned into an ice storm and just got worse and worse. 45 mph, 35, 30 mph down to 15 and 20 mph.... 90 miles of hell in about 3 and a half hours. 50 + accidents. first there was tons of cars passing me (i was going like 30) hen there were none. didn't take long to find out why. enter Darwin... they were all crashing.
i spun twice at 30 mph then 20 mph. i was in the passing lane facing oncoming traffic. lucky they were going slow too. got so bad, i drove in the break down lane about 1/3 of the way. figured i'd be in the clear by now, but now, the roads are totally impassable.
so, i'm done for the night. (that was about 1 a.m last night)
about an hour later, i decided to go bsck out.
being as stubborn as i am i decided to go back and drive for about 5 more hours and made about 130 more miles. the roads finally got passable after leaving North Carolina. the highway had become a ghost town, with almost no cars or trucks. and the ones that i did manage to see were going no more than about 35 mph. saw in total, about 70 accidents, during the entire length of north Carolina which took about 7 hours of driving, i saw many of cars that had gone off the road and couldn't get back on.... not all were bad, but many were, including people who somehow managed to cream each other, cars that went over into ravines and lots of rollovers. by the time i got to Florence, SC, my car was as one giant icicle, with about a half-inch thick coating of ice on the mirrors and spoiler. never knew this car could be driven this way, but it turns out 15-25 mph is possible, even on ice. toughest driving i've ever done. even beats the devil's spine in Durango and Sinaloa, Mex.
the reason i kept on going was that i dreaded the idea of driving today after all the ******** came out and would surely be driving too fast on some really bad roads. now that i'm in South Carolina the conditions should hopefully, be improving.
.
#39
Team Owner
Join Date: Oct 2009
Location: one thousand, five hundred miles north of Ft. Lauderdale for the summer.
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thanks buddy.
"The road conditions are very dire at this point," Joe Turner, a North Carolina transportation maintenance engineer in Raleigh, said early Tuesday. "The roads are very bad. We urge people to stay at the house."
last night i went for it becuase i had this, practically the whole interstate, all to myself and i figured it was only going to get worse. :P
/
"The road conditions are very dire at this point," Joe Turner, a North Carolina transportation maintenance engineer in Raleigh, said early Tuesday. "The roads are very bad. We urge people to stay at the house."
last night i went for it becuase i had this, practically the whole interstate, all to myself and i figured it was only going to get worse. :P
/
#40
Three Wheelin'
^ Time to bust out the ice skates! Who's up for a pickup game of hockey?
Good to hear you made it through without too much issue.
The 944 does really well in the snow, provided you have some all seasons tires on it. I've been driving mine through the past few snow falls (4" last night). There isn't a lot of snow, but the local municipalities in MO are not that proficient at removing it, or keeping it from turning to ice. I've had some difficulty getting around, but I'm still running my Hankook R-S2 tires with half tread depth. My previous 951 had all season performance tires, and handled snowy conditions amazingly well.
Good to hear you made it through without too much issue.
The 944 does really well in the snow, provided you have some all seasons tires on it. I've been driving mine through the past few snow falls (4" last night). There isn't a lot of snow, but the local municipalities in MO are not that proficient at removing it, or keeping it from turning to ice. I've had some difficulty getting around, but I'm still running my Hankook R-S2 tires with half tread depth. My previous 951 had all season performance tires, and handled snowy conditions amazingly well.
#41
Pro
Join Date: Sep 2010
Location: Upstate, South Carolina
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Good thing you didnt come through the upstate, roads are still nearly impassable (at least everything except the damn interstates, which none of us locals can get to for the most part). Been stuck at home the last two days. We did venture out today to get a little breakfast and let me say, 15 was the max speed we could do in my wife's Edge. Congrats on making it through...