Lou C
Supreme Mariner
- Joined
- Nov 10, 2002
- Messages
- 13,081
And how we did it with old school '70s American full size cars in snow:
Firestone Town & Country studded snows on the rear (and front if you were smart)
4 bags of sand in the trunk up around the spare tire for weight
a couple of coffe cans with plastic tops full of sand to put down when you got stuck
Learning the parking brake trick to stop a spinning wheel on one side
I went to FWD in '80 in my Civic and it was OK until you came to hills then you lost traction due to weight transfer. I got hooked on 4x4 when my sis in law at the time got a Subaru GL 4x4 wagon with part time 4x4. That thing was great in snow.
Now we have 3 Jeeps and a Subaru.
But still miss my old full size GM battleships. One day I was driving the '75 Olds Delta 88 up the Hutchinson Parkway on a windy day. All the sudden a large tree branch broke loose and bounced off the middle of the hood. Not even a ding. Today's vehicles would have hundreds if not thousands in damage.
Firestone Town & Country studded snows on the rear (and front if you were smart)
4 bags of sand in the trunk up around the spare tire for weight
a couple of coffe cans with plastic tops full of sand to put down when you got stuck
Learning the parking brake trick to stop a spinning wheel on one side
I went to FWD in '80 in my Civic and it was OK until you came to hills then you lost traction due to weight transfer. I got hooked on 4x4 when my sis in law at the time got a Subaru GL 4x4 wagon with part time 4x4. That thing was great in snow.
Now we have 3 Jeeps and a Subaru.
But still miss my old full size GM battleships. One day I was driving the '75 Olds Delta 88 up the Hutchinson Parkway on a windy day. All the sudden a large tree branch broke loose and bounced off the middle of the hood. Not even a ding. Today's vehicles would have hundreds if not thousands in damage.