id be willing to bet that i could get up that drive in any hatchback on summer tyres
gravel tends to never give you sheet ice so you always have plenty of traction unless youre stupid
To be fair my first run in was my own fault, I'd forgotten that you can turn right on a red light. But the clown in his lifted truck that shined more than the sun didn't need to start pushing me forwards with his truck. Getting out and walking towards him defused the situation as it turned out to be a skinny kid in daddies truck.
But I mostly came across guys who had trucks just because they wanted one as it is "the American way". There were plenty of traders but I'd say for every 2 traders, I saw 4 trucks that were being used as cars.
I will never get the American attitude to driving, it was bloody scary though.
Don't get me started on white van men. They are massive dicks as is anyone who drives a van.
What you want is an Estate (Tourer, Station Wagon). They make great party wagons, enjoy healthy economy and if you buy a good one, are a bast to drive when the time comes to hoon it.
Damn, all I had to do is call you yesterday and you could have just driven my car out of my driveway instead of me chipping away at the ice for 4 hours? You ever see what continuously packed down snow turns to after a couple of months of constant snowfall? My driveway is level, about as level as can be, then it rained and turned everything soft, and there my car sat in 8 inches of semisoft ice not moving forwards and not moving backwards after it sunk down in.
It is getting to be that I need to put my feet up on the desk every time I read this forum because the shit really gets deep around here.
Yes, for the record, my driveway is gravel, and I'm more interested in that gravel staying in my driveway rather than being chucked through my neighbor's window with the snowblower, thus I have to leave an inch or 2 of snow every time I clear it. Get 8 or so good snowstorms and you're talking 8 inches of ice packed down total.
You select folks really need to quit talking out your ass as if you are such superior intelligence over everyone else in the world. You all get 2 cm of snow and can't cope in one thread, then talk how superior you are and how you could drive in snow measured in feet over here. Come on over and show how great you are then.
That's not clearing it, that's just reducing it. If the gravel is the problem I suggest you stop being such a lazy redneck and finish surfacing your ****ing driveway.
Yes, because of where I live I got feet of snow, not millimetres. And it rendered the 4Runner useless. Partly because the tyres on it are all seasons and partly because it has open diffs.
After battling ice, snow and slushy ice (on foot because driving was neigh on impossible). I then had to climb this hill. Doesn't look much but it is a 16% gradient.
The only vehicle that could get down semi-safely it was the game keepers ATV. But then couldn't get back up. So had to go via the forest road which was hard packed snow, powdery snow and ice.
I am really, I didn't plan for the winter so didn't get suitable tyres and underestimated how bad it would get. I was told you never get cut off for more than a day. I was cut off for 4 weeks.
That photo was taken weeks after the snow had cleared everywhere else in the UK, once I got to Cropton (around 2-3 miles up the road) you wouldn't think there had been any snow at all.
Could be worse, last snow we got I tried to drive my car.. I didn't seem to realize that my tyres had been worn down to be slicks... that was an eventful trip
I was told by a doctor that if anyone else can hear your music with headphones in, it is too loud.
It is especially more damaging if you use earphones as the audio can get in, but can't get out, so just bounces around inside your ear causing damage. You suffer a similar problem if you don't put earplugs in correctly.
Chris, what part of "CARS ARE THE WORST PLACE FOR MUSIC TO SOUND GOOD" do you not understand? All your foaming and new speakers will still sound wrong?
Tell that to the **** in the CRX who comes down my road EVERY DAMN NIGHT between 8pm and 11.59pm, his sub makes our ears hurt every time he walks on by the sound physically hurts your ears when you hear it through bricks and glass. It's horrendeous.
I also never understood why people put their volumes up, as long as you can hear it clearly, why put it full volume? I just don't understand. Also with earphones, I don't use the full volume, cos I would like to hear the guy behind me about to stab me in the back. Rather than just walk around with a tinny noise externally following me.
That advice is a bit generalised because it depends on the type of headphones you're using. Open-backed headphones are going to be a lot more audible to bystanders than closed cans, for example. Even closed headphones vary a lot in the amount of sound they bleed out - it's why most recording studios use DT-100s (well, and because they're modular so they're cheap to maintain), otherwise you start hearing stuff like click track bleeps that got tracked in your drum overheads and other such irritations.
There is often detail in music that you might not hear unless it's at a good volume level (assuming you've got decent reproduction equipment), and certainly bass frequencies benefit from more power, but yeah it's also true that too loud sounds worse than too quiet.
Incidentally has anyone worked out why live gigs are always so loud? I still can't figure out why. The bands and the audience both end up wearing ear protection - why not just turn the ****ing PA down? Stupid.
It is quite loud, but I've never put on any ear protection myself. I also like to listen to music a little louder than normal though (not the type that you hear at every redlight however), so my ears will probably be fried in 30-40 years.