Wolf Island Diver
Well-Known Member
Sounds like you’re plowing, i.e., you’re sliding and when you turn your tires, you’re now plowing the sidewalls into the snow as you move forward. Turning the wheels usually causes your vehicle to follow the direction in which they turn, but because the low coefficient of dynamic friction in snow, you’re turned tires just keep moving forward in the initial direction of travel. Even when they do hookup, there are repeated instances of this sliding/plowing. If you’re driving in previous tracks your also feel your tires hitting the buildup. All this feels like jerky resistance. Like the truck doesn’t want to steer. It’s worse on more aggressive and or bigger tires.This is the first significant snow/ice since getting the gladiator - it's all stock standard mojave, and this isn't about the tires, Falken Wildpeak ATs.
I've driven these same roads no issue in similar conditions in previous vehicles. Sealed surface, fun and windy with sections unplowed, unsalted, salted, salted/plowed. I have only needed to use 4H/4L on soft gravel a few times.
Driving in 4H seems like the appropriate choice for mixed snow/ice... but anything short of the slightest turn seemed like the wheels were dragging laterally and without power steering. (as opposed to expected heavy load). This is all driving at low speed. Trying to maneuver for parking was a nightmare.
Driving in 2H was a delicate endeavor, frequent loss of traction but at least I could make a regular turn at the stop signs and sharper corners. Again, driving at low speed.
Any advice, suggestions, recommendations?
My SUV/Truck Snow driving spiel. Feel free to read or not.
I’ve noticed 1 thing about people and snow driving with trucks and SUVs over the years. They suck at it. I successfully drove an FRS with summer performance tires past a myriad of crashed SUVs, through a snow storm in the winter of 15/16. When lived in the mountains I would go out in my truck and count the number of SUVs and trucks stuck on the side of the road on Interstate 81. The truckers done seem to crash, but every 1/4 mile there’s another SUV or pickup in a ditch.
I’ve driven fire trucks in deep snow and ambulances on ice covered interstates. I’ve done a significant amount of off road driving in snow as well. I’ve never crashed. I’ve never slid off the road. I’ve only been severely (requiring a shovel) stuck once and that was off road. My only trick/skill has been to not overestimate my vehicle or its/my abilities. In other words, to be careful. That’s it. That’s the secret to successful snow driving. Drive slow, make slow movements/changes in direction. Afford massively increased stopping distances.
Here’s some specific thoughts on this. I’m sure some people will be triggered.
- SUVs suck ass in snow. Pickup trucks are worse. Both have high centers of gravity, and weigh a lot. 4x4 tends to get people in more trouble than it solves because of a false sense of capability. Years of marketing + stupidity.
- Pickups (unless you’re hauling hunting dogs or overland gear) have light rear ends and in snow this means less rear end traction. Off road, it can be hard to get up a hill. They also tend to spin because of their poor weight distribution.
- On road, M/T, or really large tires all feel worse in snow especially once they begin to plow (turned to the side and still loving forward). They tend to have much more steering resistance and just feel odd on snowy roads. Fully off road in deep snow, they’re better, but snow tracks will still kick them around.
- For driving in snow on the road, the best thing is a AWD car like a Subaru or even a small crossover. People assume 4x4s would be best and either find themselves disappointed, or worse over confident and in a ditch.
- Unfortunately, probably due to testosterone poisoning, what I mostly see crashed in winter is large SUVs and full size pickups driven by men who think 4x4 means they can drive semi-normally in snow. So they crash.
- 4x4 only helps you go. It doesn’t significantly reduce stopping times in snow. It often only works for going with lockers, because frequently each axle has 1 wheel with minimal to no traction, but there’s no reason all 4 tires can’t spin either. By all means, drive in 4x4 but don’t alter your care compared to driving in a RWD car. In my experience 4x4 provides only a slight help in lane keeping in snow. It’s not dynamic in the way advanced AWD is. Power in a 4x4 system (goes where resistance is the least. Power in a modern advanced AWD system goes where it’s needed.
- A LSD isn’t great when already moving in snow. It can cause the rear end to violently jerk to the side. Any sudden increase in traction can do this. I like to start/stop in 4x4 and locked. Not flip back and forth on the fly while moving in snow/ice. You want to avoid sudden changes in traction, braking, etc.
- There’s almost never just snow. It’s always a combination of ice and snow or just compressed snow on the road which functions a lot like ice. Driving on snow, melts it which in turns to ice.
- Nothing helps you go or stop in ice. The best thing is to allow for the possibility of sliding. Position yourself on the road where you have some runout if you slide. Drive slowly, brake early and lightly, accelerate slowly. Consider not driving at all. DoorDash and give them a big tip.
- I can’t think of a time that I needed the additional torque of 4-low driving in snow. However, off road, I often prefer the RPM range of 4-low and a higher gear, even in snow. Just keep in mind the ease at which you can spin tires with the extra torque. Obviously you shouldn’t need/use 4-low in snow/ice on road.
All of this really adds up to 1 thing. You should drive in snow/ice as if your truck is no better in snow than a 2WD car because, to a large degree it isn’t and the few advantages of 4x4 can disappear in an instant. The overconfidence 4x4 seems to create in people probably outweighs any actual advantages of 4x4 driving on snowy/icy roads. So drive carefully.
One side benefit of driving as if your Gladiator isn’t a snow cheat code is that you’ll really piss off other SUV/truck drivers who are idiots. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve had someone roar past me in snowy road conditions because I was driving too slow, only to immediately lose control and crash in front of me.
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