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The Water Cooler
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Okies and Ice
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<blockquote data-quote="NightShade" data-source="post: 2946537" data-attributes="member: 29706"><p>I drove around Iowa in the winter in a V8 305 5 speed Camaro and never ended up in the ditch during the winter. I learned to drive on snow and ice but I also make sure I leave space and that is the biggest problem I see most of the time. One jackwagon trying to push another and it doesn't matter if it's snow and ice or just rain there are tons of accidents. 4X4 vs 2X4 is pretty much irrelevant here even when it is snow and ice especially when you are riding tail. Not to mention stomping the gas to see one wheel on the front spin and one on the back. It's all about being gentle on the throttle and easy on the brake generally stepping off the throttle so you slow down as naturally as the vehicle can on it's own without using the brake. But too many people want to leave out with five minutes of extra time when the weather sucks rather than the thirty to forty minutes early they should.</p><p></p><p>I stay home when it gets nasty so I don't get hit by other people not because I can't drive on it and be safe. I simply know that the odds of someone else hitting me is too high to risk it.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="NightShade, post: 2946537, member: 29706"] I drove around Iowa in the winter in a V8 305 5 speed Camaro and never ended up in the ditch during the winter. I learned to drive on snow and ice but I also make sure I leave space and that is the biggest problem I see most of the time. One jackwagon trying to push another and it doesn't matter if it's snow and ice or just rain there are tons of accidents. 4X4 vs 2X4 is pretty much irrelevant here even when it is snow and ice especially when you are riding tail. Not to mention stomping the gas to see one wheel on the front spin and one on the back. It's all about being gentle on the throttle and easy on the brake generally stepping off the throttle so you slow down as naturally as the vehicle can on it's own without using the brake. But too many people want to leave out with five minutes of extra time when the weather sucks rather than the thirty to forty minutes early they should. I stay home when it gets nasty so I don't get hit by other people not because I can't drive on it and be safe. I simply know that the odds of someone else hitting me is too high to risk it. [/QUOTE]
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