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Off-Road Driving Techniques
Snow Driving
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The first key to effective snow driving is a light throttle
and choosing the correct tyre. Driving in snow requires a
tall tyre with a narrow section-width.
This allows the tyre to cut through the crust and obtain
traction on the hard surface beneath the snow (the opposite
of sand tyres).
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Traction can be enhanced by siping
the tyres. Sipes are little razor cuts across the tread blocks which increase
the number of biting edges on the tyre. Studded tyres are another effective
solution. For deep snow, use snow chains or cables. If you only have one set,
always put them onto the rear wheels (note that on a front-wheel drive 2x4
you'd put them on the wheels under power, i.e. the front wheels).
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You could try throw some bags of coarse-grain sand into the back as ballast
weight, which you can also use to help you get unstuck later. A shovel is
another handy addition.
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If you're driving a permanent 4x4,
keep the center differential
open. The last thing you want is four powered wheels all at the same speed
intent on going in different directions. So, do not lock the center
differential, as then only the misbehaving wheel is pulling towards the
ditch, instead of all four. However, as many modern SUV's have
part time four wheel drive (4x4
locked or 2-wheel drive), you make do with subtle and ginger throttle
and steering inputs while in four wheel drive.
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Lastly, avoid revving the engine, go into low range in deep snow, and, as mentioned above, use a
very light throttle. This will encourage the tyres to bite and grip rather
than spin without grip.
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© 1998-2013 Martin Wittenburg and Michael Wittenburg. All rights reserved.
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