Driving On Snow Or Ice - GMC 2003 Envoy XL Owner's Manual

Hide thumbs Also See for 2003 Envoy XL:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

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; OOC) and freezing rain begins
to fall. Try to avoid driving on wet ice until salt and sand
crews can get there.
Whatever the condition
-
smooth ice, packed, blowing
or loose snow
-
drive with caution.
If you have traction assist, keep the system on. It will
improve your ability to accelerate when driving on
a slippery road. But you can turn the traction system off
if your vehicle ever gets stuck in sand, mud, ice or
snow. See If You Are Stuck: In Sand, Mud, Ice or
Snow
on
page 4-44. Even though your vehicle has a
traction system, you'll want
to
slow down and adjust
your driving
to
the road conditions. See Traction Assist
System (TAS)
on
page 4-8.
If you don't have a traction system, accelerate gently.
Try not to break the gentle traction. If you accelerate too
fast, the drive wheels will spin and polish the surface
under the tires even more.
4-40

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents