Friday, March 22, 2013

The art of winter driving: 28 tips to give you cold comfort

Edmonton

When the driving gets tough, a quiet voice sometimes plays in the back of my head. I hear it most often in winter, when snow and ice up the ante.

The voice says things like: “Careful – that guy ahead is going to hit that frozen rut and go sideways,” or “Watch out for that shadowed spot by the trees. There’s going to be ice there.”


Here are 28 tips to give you cold comfort during winter driving:-

Smoothness is everything:
Use light pressure on the accelerator, brakes and steering wheel. Make your hands move slowly. Abrupt movements will break traction and start a skid.

Keep your eyes focused far ahead:
You are a human stability control system, and vision is key to its proper operation. Looking far down the road reduces head movement and moderates your steering inputs, reducing the chance of a slide.

Kick the snow off your boots before you get in the car:
If you don’t, it will melt inside the car, turn into water vapour, and fog the windows.

Remove the snow from every surface of your car, not just the windows:
Snow on the hood and front end can blow up onto the windshield as you accelerate. Snow on the roof can fall down over the back window – or slide forward under braking, covering the windshield like a blindfold.

Keep your lights on all the time:
That way, other vehicles can see you better.

Newer cars stop and handle better on ice than old ones do:
Late-model cars have multi-channel ABS systems that can stop you much shorter than old-school systems. Late-model cars also have electronic stability control systems that can apply corrective braking to individual wheels if you start to slide sideways.

Switch on the air conditioning:
It removes moisture from the cabin air, improving defroster performance.

Stay behind a snowplow or salt truck:
It’s safer than passing it.

Turn off cruise control:
You need to respond instantly if you start losing traction.

Change lanes slowly and smoothly:
The ridge of snow that builds up between lanes will grab your wheels, so you need to minimize your steering angle.

If you skid:
Keep your eyes aimed where you want to go, and steer toward that point.

Be extra careful when the thermometer is yo-yoing:
If the temperature climbs above the freezing point and falls again, snow can melt, then turn into glare ice.

Do some test sliding:
Go to an empty parking lot and try sliding your car so you’ll know what it feels like. This will help create a conditioned response and allow you to react properly when you slide unexpectedly.

Keep two sets of wheels:
One with summer tires, the other with dedicated winter tires. Switch them slightly ahead of the coming season.

Beware the all-season tire:
They’re okay in summer, but they don’t come close to winter tires on snow and ice. The difference in acceleration, cornering and stopping power can range from five to 20 per cent, depending on your car, technique conditions. That improvement may spell the difference between crashing and getting home.

The most important feature of winter tires isn’t their more aggressive tread:
What really matters most is their special rubber compound, which keeps them soft at lower temperatures, increasing traction.

Use winter tires on all four wheels:
Many drivers still believe that you only need winter tires on the driven wheels. Wrong. Although the driven wheels are key to acceleration, braking and cornering call for traction at all four corners. Mixing winter and non-winter tires creates a dangerous traction imbalance that can throw you out of control.

Carry a cell phone:
Keep it charged. Don’t use it while you’re driving.

Don’t wear clunky winter boots:
You need to feel the pedals.

Don’t spin your wheels if you get stuck:
This digs you in deeper. Rock the car gently back and forth by shifting into forward and reverse, building momentum so you can escape.

Go slow:
Snow and ice increase stopping distance and reduce cornering power. The posted limit may be too fast for winter conditions.

Multiply your following distance:
In summer, most drivers allow a two- to three-second gap behind traffic. This is calculated by counting how long it takes you to reach an object after the car in front passes it. In slippery conditions, you should triple or quadruple this.

Four-wheel drive won’t help you stop faster:
Unfortunately, it does let you accelerate faster (this isn’t always a good thing).

Beware of sun-shadowed areas:
Even if the road is clear, shadowed areas may icy, since they’re sheltered from the sun. Ice isn’t as slippery as you think – if you have good car-control skills and proper winter tires, an icy surface can offer more traction than you’d expect. But it takes experience to use it properly.

Bridges are dangerous:
They cool faster than the road, so they’re more slippery in cold weather.

When you stop for fuel:
Clean your windows and rearview mirrors, plus your head and taillights.

Keep your windshield washer fluid topped up:
You may need it.


And the most important thing
Take a winter driving course: 
You’d be amazed at how much you can learn from professionals.


Source: Frootal Care

Spring storm sends 100 vehicles crashing south of Edmonton

Edmonton - A spring blizzard blasted through the Prairies on Thursday, killing three and causing a chaotic series of crashes south of Edmonton involving at least 100 vehicles.

South of Edmonton, road conditions weren’t any better. Mounties say just before noon, multiple collisions happened within a half-kilometre of each other. At least 100 vehicles were involved and at least 45 vehicles were damaged, say police.

“And from that collision we ended up getting a chain reaction, so multiple other collisions occurred from there, due to the poor visibility and the icy roads,” said Const. Karolina Malik.

About 22 people went to area hospitals, including a man with serious injuries. The RCMP said the man was outside his vehicle after being involved in a collision and he was found under a semi-trailer.

Kerry Williamson, with Alberta Health Services, said Thursday that about 80 others were treated at the crash site for minor to moderate injuries.

The crashes involved a large passenger bus and several semi-trucks.

Robert Mitchell was on a Greyhound bus at the time.

“It was like a domino effect — one vehicle after another, just smashing, smashing, smashing until about 60-70 cars,” he told CTV Edmonton.

A cattle liner carrying 74 head of cattle was involved in the monstrous crash. Police said late Thursday that the cattle were being transferred to another cattle liner. Two cattle, however, were injured in the crash and had to be put down.

“The cattle have been in this liner since about noon today and finally they’ve gotten another liner there and they have to get these 60-worked up cattle out and into a new one,” said Cpl. Colette Zazalak.

A bus passenger tweeted a photo of the mayhem, calling it a massive pileup, but adding that everyone on the bus was all right.

“Hitchhiking my way to Edmonton via Wetaskiwin on country roads,” Derek Fildebrandt wrote in another tweet. “Found a Tim Hortons. There is a God.”

Paramedics, EMS crews and firefighters trudged through the snow, going from vehicle to vehicle, to check on those inside, Williamson said.

They commandeered three Greyhound buses on the highway and used them as triage centres, he said. Police also escorted four Edmonton transit buses to the scene to provide shelter to motorists who were stranded.

STARS air ambulance had to turn down requests to ferry patients because of the bad weather, said spokesman Cam Heke. The helicopters simply couldn’t get in the air.

RCMP closed a 60-kilometre stretch of Highway 2 — the main road between Edmonton and Calgary — and redirected traffic away from the scene. The highway was reopened in both directions just before midnight MDT, about 12 hours after the crashes.

Police said “treacherous” road conditions remained on the QE II south of Edmonton, all the way to Red Deer.

“Unless travel is absolutely critical, police request the public stay off all area highways,” police said.

Mounties in Saskatchewan also issued travel warnings and closed highways due to heavy snow, winds and icy conditions.

“There has been instances of people driving past these warnings getting stranded, even cases of barricades being moved and then continuing on past road closed signs,” said RCMP Regina Sgt. Doug Coleman.

“This storm is of such severity that it makes it difficult to impossible even for emergency personnel to be on the roads.”

Coleman said in a news release that people were stranded on the Trans-Canada Highway overnight Wednesday, and officers couldn’t get out to get them until Thursday morning.

Police said numerous motorists were stranded on Highway 17 north of Lloydminster on the Alberta-Saskatchewan boundary.

Traffic in both directions was at a standstill because of a snowdrift 100 metres long and more than half a metre deep.