Osteodoc08
Well-Known Member
More weight in the bed and air down your tires. Consider chains if allowed by local regulations.
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Very good advice. Same applies to motorcycles.traction control in 2WD, AWD and 4WD only work when you are hitting the gas pedal, if your going around a turn while hitting the brakes, coasting not under power or giving to much gas the tires will slip. when you are heading to a turn, brake in a straight line without turning, then use constant throttle during the turn, if you accelerate or brake you'll slide. constant throttle low revs, like most said the weight in the bed helps, plus severe snow rated tires are helpful, the falken at3s on the mojave are great in the snow.
Yeah it’s a pickup with part time 4WD so drive accordingly meaning that stick to left….use it. Leave that Grand Cherokee shit behind and pretend it never happened, Grands: ZJ/WJ/WK or WKll are on a different playing field than a JT, and for snow a much better field they will always win that fight. It’s approx 4800 lbs+\- absorbed over a 137 inch wheel base, if that rear axle were even 3 inches farther back it would be unbearable in snow.Lovr my JT Sport S - but man, I have been disappointed in the snow performance.I live in WI (grew up driving here) and have driven everything from a small sedan to a Jeep Grand Cherokee, to now my JT.I know I have a truck - and they drive different than a AWD vehicle of an SUV, but man I am not impressed with the constant fish tailing around town for now it’s third winter.I don’t drive fast. Really… I don’tI have p285/70/17 Falken AT3W tires. 36 psiI have x2 70lbs tube sand bags in the bed over the axles.I’ll shift it into 4hi sometimes to go on snow covered roads, but a lot of my issues are in 2hi and with turns.I went to pickup my son from daycare today with my wife, and turning onto a road from a stop - I slipped multiple times and also saw the traction control light flash on.Im not really sure what to do or if this is just how it is. My pregnant wife made a comment “isn’t this thing supposed to be good in snow” and I couldn’t really even answer her.Any ideas or tips?
I thought once the tread gets packed it helps with traction.Then make sure you have good tread on your tires. Once ice and snow fill the tread you might as well be in slicks, like a NASCAR.
If you regularly experience ice and/or hard-packed show conditions, then studs are your friends. There is no "faux pas" using then on a Jeep....
A lot of drivers here in Idaho used studded tires during the winter. Don't think I've seen them on a Jeep yet. Would that be a faux pas for a Jeep owner? Asking for a friend...
There is an optional Selec Trac transfer case that gives you 4H auto.Physics in action. Wide tire footprint + all terrain tread profile + rear wheel drive = little traction.
4WD and extra weight will get you going, but you will still have a harder time stopping unless you address all three factors.
For the same reason, I run a dedicated set of 265/70/17 Blizzaks winter tires for a third of the year.
I would love a center locking differential AWD option on the Gladiator similar to the Toyota Torsen system. It's a nuisance shifting between 2HI and 4HI, especially when the roads are partially covered with ice.
Exactly. But Jeep didn't do a very good job promoting the Selec-Trac option over the years (IMO) and most dealers ordered their inventory without it, even in snowy areas. For only $695 (in 2021 when I ordered mine) it was a no-brainer. Actually, if it wasn't for the Selec-Trac option, I would not have bought a JT.There is an optional Selec Trac transfer case that gives you 4H auto.