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The Water Cooler
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Snow Reports?
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<blockquote data-quote="yukonjack" data-source="post: 2660829" data-attributes="member: 2939"><p>He was driving too fast for his vehicle. A 2-wheel drive pickup truck with no weight in the back cannot travel on an ice covered road at the same speed as a front wheel drive or four wheel drive vehicle. Saw so many people in 2-wheel drive pickups trying to do that yesterday in OKC. I guess people think they are driving a pickup so they must be invincible. </p><p></p><p>If the guy in the video had added extra weight in the bed of the pickup right over the drive axle he might have had a better chance of keeping the rear end attached to road. 200 pounds of sand bag tubes is what I put in the back of my truck and it's 4-wheel drive.</p><p></p><p>If I was driving rear wheel drive pickup in the winter I'd probably invest in a set of Blizzak tires to run in the winter. Put them on their own rims so you can put them on or take them off as needed. People here just need to slow down on the ice.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="yukonjack, post: 2660829, member: 2939"] He was driving too fast for his vehicle. A 2-wheel drive pickup truck with no weight in the back cannot travel on an ice covered road at the same speed as a front wheel drive or four wheel drive vehicle. Saw so many people in 2-wheel drive pickups trying to do that yesterday in OKC. I guess people think they are driving a pickup so they must be invincible. If the guy in the video had added extra weight in the bed of the pickup right over the drive axle he might have had a better chance of keeping the rear end attached to road. 200 pounds of sand bag tubes is what I put in the back of my truck and it's 4-wheel drive. If I was driving rear wheel drive pickup in the winter I'd probably invest in a set of Blizzak tires to run in the winter. Put them on their own rims so you can put them on or take them off as needed. People here just need to slow down on the ice. [/QUOTE]
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