Owner's Manual

Driving
on
Snow
or
Ice
Most of the time, those places where your tires meet the
road probably have good traction.
However,
if
there is snow or ice between your tires and
the road, you
can
have a very slippery situation. You’ll
have a lot less traction or “grip” and will need
to
be
very careful.
1
What’s the worst time for this?
“Wet
ice.”
Very
cold
snow or ice can be slick
and
hard to drive
on.
But wet
ice can be even more trouble because it may offer the
least traction
of
all,
You
can get wet ice when it’s
about
freezing
(32°F;
OOC)
and freezing rain begins to fall.
Try
to
avoid driving
on
wet ice until salt
and
sand crews
can
get there.
Whatever the condition
--
smooth
ice, packed, blowing
or loose snow
--
drive
with caution.
If
you have
traction
control, keep the system
on.
It
will
improve your ability to accelerate
when
driving
on
a
slippery road. Even though your vehicle has
a
traction
control system, you’ll want to slow down and adjust
your driving to the road conditions. See “Traction
Control System’’ in the Index.
If
you
don’t have the traction control system, accelerate
gently. Try not
to
break the fragile traction. If you
accelerate too fast,
the
drive wheels will spin
and
polish
the surface under the tires even more.
4-26