snow, snow, and more snow
snow, snow, and more snow
Hey everyone,
We've got 6 inches on the ground and maybe 6 more coming tonight. I was driving last night when this snow storm hit. It was a complete whiteout, it snowed 2 inches in 30 minutes. I've got a Tomtom, in my truck and boy was that a life saver. It told me when to turn off at the right roads and how far it was to them.
Are any of you having any snow, I've seen on the TV that England is getting more snow than it's had in years. What about everybody else across the pond, are you having snow?
We've got 6 inches on the ground and maybe 6 more coming tonight. I was driving last night when this snow storm hit. It was a complete whiteout, it snowed 2 inches in 30 minutes. I've got a Tomtom, in my truck and boy was that a life saver. It told me when to turn off at the right roads and how far it was to them.
Are any of you having any snow, I've seen on the TV that England is getting more snow than it's had in years. What about everybody else across the pond, are you having snow?
See ya
Mark
When all else fails, get a bigger hammer
Mark
When all else fails, get a bigger hammer
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- Site Governance Team
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- Location: Worcestershire, England
Hi Mark,
Last weekend I was working at our head office, in Andover, Hampshire (south UK), with an associate from another company near Detroit US.
Hearing the weather forcasts for the UK, we decided to work late nights and early mornings (over the weekend) then try and get him a flight back a day earlier (Sunday).
We made the right choice ! If he'd have tried to make the original flight (4 am Monday morning for gods' sake!!) he'd have had long delays. (I also got a few extra hours in bed)
Down the south of the UK and up in Scotland, snow has been pretty heavy. Only half of the work force made it in to the Andover office on Monday.
I live in the middle (midlands) and we've only had about 2 inches so far.
What worries me is I am now in Sunderland. North, about an hour short of the scottish border.
At the moment they have had no snow but, it is supposed to come in heavy overnight (Wednesday) so, I could have fun trying to get home tomorrow.
Look on the bright side.
Laptop battery fully charged.
Mobile 3G USB network stick in my pocket.
If I'm stranded in the car, I can still 'log on' to this site
Mike
Last weekend I was working at our head office, in Andover, Hampshire (south UK), with an associate from another company near Detroit US.
Hearing the weather forcasts for the UK, we decided to work late nights and early mornings (over the weekend) then try and get him a flight back a day earlier (Sunday).
We made the right choice ! If he'd have tried to make the original flight (4 am Monday morning for gods' sake!!) he'd have had long delays. (I also got a few extra hours in bed)
Down the south of the UK and up in Scotland, snow has been pretty heavy. Only half of the work force made it in to the Andover office on Monday.
I live in the middle (midlands) and we've only had about 2 inches so far.
What worries me is I am now in Sunderland. North, about an hour short of the scottish border.
At the moment they have had no snow but, it is supposed to come in heavy overnight (Wednesday) so, I could have fun trying to get home tomorrow.
Look on the bright side.
Laptop battery fully charged.
Mobile 3G USB network stick in my pocket.
If I'm stranded in the car, I can still 'log on' to this site

Mike
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- Site Governance Team
- Posts: 306
- Joined: Wed Apr 16, 2008 10:18 am
- Location: Worcestershire, England
-
- Site Governance Team
- Posts: 306
- Joined: Wed Apr 16, 2008 10:18 am
- Location: Worcestershire, England
-
- Site Governance Team
- Posts: 306
- Joined: Wed Apr 16, 2008 10:18 am
- Location: Worcestershire, England
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- True Blue
- Posts: 149
- Joined: Wed Apr 16, 2008 6:17 pm
- Location: Brailes, Warwickshire, UK
I left home for Ely at 6.15am this morning and arrived at 8.30am, a trip that usually takes me 45 mins. Yes there was snow on the road but it was rutted with salt and wheel tracks and quite safe to travel at around 35 mph.
Problem was the car at the front of the queue wqas driving at 10 mph and he went all the way to Ely. It was quite frustrating as it was unsafe to overtake him.
When you think about it, it is 18 to 20 years since we have had real snow like this and it means that a lot of people driving today have had no experience of driving in these conditions. Coupled with the fact that every radio station is banging on about how dangerous it is out there.
The poor blighters are terrified. Not saying that they should drive dangerously but should just be aware of how the car handles and the do's and don'ts of driving. Leave plenty of room and use the gearbox rather than the brakes. Gentle on the throttle too.
Problem was the car at the front of the queue wqas driving at 10 mph and he went all the way to Ely. It was quite frustrating as it was unsafe to overtake him.
When you think about it, it is 18 to 20 years since we have had real snow like this and it means that a lot of people driving today have had no experience of driving in these conditions. Coupled with the fact that every radio station is banging on about how dangerous it is out there.
The poor blighters are terrified. Not saying that they should drive dangerously but should just be aware of how the car handles and the do's and don'ts of driving. Leave plenty of room and use the gearbox rather than the brakes. Gentle on the throttle too.
Fordson Tractor Pages, now officially linked to: Fordson Tractor Club of Australia, Ford and Fordson Association and Blue Force.
Brian
Brian
I hate salt on the road but it is nessesary for the heavy trafic. I have nothing against driving in snow even if it is 20-30 cm but if there are only three wheeltracks on the road then it is a little difficult when someone is comming in the different direction. Then You will never know how an other driver is reacting in difficult situations so it is best to be prepared for the worst. I have a Nissan Pick-up with differential lock (not 4wd) but I allways have a 215Kg heavy steelplate on the back so I don´t get stuck. And then I could take the Roadless in the morning, but we have not had that mutch snow......yet. 

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- Site Governance Team & Expert Team
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- Location: Montague Calif. USA
I don't like salt on the roads either. It sure eats up the sheet metal on your car. Our road department never used to use any kind of de-icer, so we have 50 year old cars with no rust. They use magnesium chloride now. The big selling point was that it was non-corrosive. I wonder why there's big chunks of rust flaking off the back of the de-icer trucks?
You can sure tell the people that don't drive in snow very much by the way they drive. They either drive too slow and hold up traffic, or drive too fast and wreck.
You can sure tell the people that don't drive in snow very much by the way they drive. They either drive too slow and hold up traffic, or drive too fast and wreck.
Yes, snow tyres (M+S) are obligatorily in December, January and February but metal studs are optional. We normally use snow tyres with metal studs from the time when to expect snow in the fall to the point in spring when it melts. At summertime the studs are forbidden.Bensdexta wrote:Grani,
Do you fit your vehicles with snow tyres with metal studs, all winter?
All the best,
Ben