Driving On Snow Or Ice - Buick 2002 LeSabre Owner's Manual

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Driving on Snow or Ice

Most of the time, those places where your tires meet the
road probably have good traction.
However, if there is snow or ice between your tires
and the road, you can have a very slippery situation.
You'll have a lot less traction or "grip" and will
need to be very careful.
What's the worst time for this? "Wet ice." Very cold
snow or ice can be slick and hard to drive on. But wet
ice can be even more trouble because it may offer the
least traction of all. You can get wet ice when it's about
freezing (32 _ F; 0 _ C) and freezing rain begins to fall.
Try to avoid driving on wet ice until salt and sand crews
can get there.
--
Whatever the condition
--
or loose snow
drive with caution.
If you have traction control, keep the system on.
It will improve your ability to accelerate when driving
on a slippery road. Even though your vehicle has a
traction control system, you'll want to slow down and
adjust your driving to the road conditions. See "Traction
Control System" in the Index.
If you don't have the traction control system, accelerate
gently. Try not to break the fragile traction. If you
accelerate too fast, the drive wheels will spin and polish
the surface under the tires even more.
smooth ice, packed, blowing
4-27

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