With an icy weekend ahead and lots of people hitting
the roads we hope you all drive safe. The worst part of driving in Houston
Texas is usually traffic but this winter we have ice, snow, and sleet covered
roads. Here are some safety tips to keep in mind while trying to tackle that
commute to work or weekend trip. Below are 10 safety tips from Edmunds.com:
The best tip for winter driving: Sometimes it's best
to stay home, or at least remain where you are until snow plows and sanding
crews have done their work. If you crash on a snowy or icy road, you'll
certainly be late — or worse.
Get a grip. To have adequate snow traction, a tire
requires at least 6/32-inch deep tread, according to The Tire Rack. (New
passenger-car tires usually have 10/32-inch of tread.) Ultrahigh-performance
"summer" tires have little or no grip in snow. Even
"all-season" tires don't necessarily have great snow traction: Some
do, some don't. If you live where the roads are regularly covered with snow,
use snow tires (sometimes called "winter tires" by tiremakers). They
have a "snowflake on the mountain" symbol on the sidewall, meaning
they meet a tire-industry standard for snow traction.
Make sure you can see. Replace windshield wiper
blades. Clean the inside of your windows thoroughly. Apply a water-shedding
material (such as Rain-X) to the outside of all windows, including the mirrors.
Make sure your windshield washer system works and is full of an anti-icing
fluid. Drain older fluid by running the washers until new fluid appears:
Switching fluid colors makes this easy.
Run the air-conditioner. In order to remove
condensation and frost from the interior of windows, engage your
air-conditioner and select the fresh air option: It's fine to set the
temperature on "hot." Many cars automatically do this when you choose
the defrost setting.
Check your lights. Use your headlights so that
others will see you and, we hope, not pull out in front of you. Make sure your
headlights and taillights are clear of snow. If you have an older car with
sand-pitted headlights, get a new set of lenses. To prevent future pitting,
cover the new lens with a clear tape like that used to protect the leading edge
of helicopter rotor blades and racecar wings. It's available from auto-racing
supply sites.
Give yourself a brake. Learn how to get maximum
efficiency from your brakes before an emergency. It's easy to properly use
antilock brakes: Stomp, stay and steer. Stomp on the pedal as if you were
trying to snap it off. Stay hard on the pedal. Steer around the obstacle. (A
warning: A little bit of steering goes a very long way in an emergency. See Tip
8.) If you drive on icy roads or roads that are covered with snow, modify your
ABS technique: After you "Stomp" and the ABS begins cycling — you
will feel pulses in the pedal or hear the system working — ease up slightly on
the pedal until the pulsing happens only once a second.
For vehicles without ABS, you'll have to rely on the
old-fashioned system: You. For non-ABS on a mixed-surface road, push the brake
pedal hard until the wheels stop rolling, then immediately release the brake
enough to allow the wheels to begin turning again. Repeat this sequence
rapidly. This is not the same as "pumping the brake." Your goal is to
have the tires producing maximum grip regardless of whether the surface is
snow, ice or damp pavement. Use the tips in"How To Survive the Top 10
Driving Emergencies" to practice before the emergency.
Watch carefully for "black ice." If the
road looks slick, it probably is. This is especially true with one of winter's
worst hazards: "black ice." Also called "glare ice," this
is nearly transparent ice that often looks like a harmless puddle or is
overlooked entirely. Test the traction with a smooth brake application or
slight turn of the wheel.
Remember the tough spots. Race drivers must memorize
the nuances of every track, so they can alter their path for changing track
conditions. You must remember where icy roads tend to occur. Bridges and
intersections are common places. Also: wherever water runs across the road. I
know people who lost control on ice caused by homeowners draining above-ground
pools and by an automatic lawn sprinkler that sprayed water onto a street in
freezing temperatures.
Too much steering is bad. If a slick section in a
turn causes your front tires to lose grip, the common — but incorrect —
reaction is to continue turning the steering wheel. That's like writing checks
on an overdrawn account: It won't improve the situation and may make things
worse. If the icy conditions end and the front tires regain grip, your car will
dart whichever way the wheels are pointed. That may be into oncoming traffic or
a telephone pole. Something very similar happens if you steer too much while
braking with ABS. Sadly, there are situations where nothing will prevent a
crash, but turning the steering too much never helps.
Avoid rear-tire slides. First, choose a car with
electronic stability control. Fortunately, ESC will be mandatory on all 2012
models. Next, make sure your rear tires have at least as much tread as your
front tires. Finally, if you buy winter tires, get four.
Technology offers no miracles. All-wheel drive and
electronic stability control can get you into trouble by offering a false sense
of security. AWD can only help a vehicle accelerate or keep moving: It can't
help you go around a snow-covered turn, much less stop at an icy intersection.
ESC can prevent a spinout, but it can't clear ice from the roads or give your
tires more traction. Don't let these lull you into overestimating the available
traction.
http://www.edmunds.com/car-safety/driving-on-snow-and-ice-10-safety-tips.html
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