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Home > General > Driving on Snow tonight |
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agin Member Since: 09 Oct 2007 Location: Lausanne Posts: 10 |
I have just try tonight my fl2 on the snow (about 10 cm on the road)...and it was great, a lot of fun. I'm currently fitted with the original tires (michelin latitude HP tour) and it's ok for normal snow condition.
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14th Nov 2007 9:16 pm |
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Goldstone69 Member Since: 17 Sep 2007 Location: Huddersfield Posts: 403 |
Very jealous of you agin... wish it would snow like that in England we are lucky if we get 5cm all winter |
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14th Nov 2007 9:24 pm |
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Tim in Scotland Member Since: 12 Mar 2006 Location: All at sea Posts: 875 |
In snow you should check that the DSC is disabled (default is enabled) as well as the snow setting of the TR selected, it makes a big difference if it is as it allows you to wrench the wheel backwards and forwards and to play the throttle to get traction without the electronics cutting the engine power! Same in mud and on sand. How can carbon have a footprint, it has no feet?
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14th Nov 2007 9:33 pm |
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highbridgeflyer Member Since: 07 Jan 2007 Location: Lincolnshire Posts: 34 |
Errr why??? The whole idea of TR modes is to limit wheelspin. Disableing the DSC will result in lost traction. Only to be done when in sand or a bit of brute force is needed to get up a very muddy bank. |
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14th Nov 2007 10:28 pm |
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defkalion Member Since: 17 Feb 2007 Location: Athens Posts: 350 |
If you have DSC on on snow, this will result in progressive lose of all power and you'll stop. Each time dsc detects slippery conditions it takes some power off the wheels. On snow this happens a lot, so you'll eventually stop. Hence, I think Tim is right, you have to take it off. My question is: why terain response snow setting does not do that automatically? Possibly 'cause it's not just for snow? I guess...! |
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15th Nov 2007 6:30 am |
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VIKING Member Since: 22 Sep 2007 Location: Stavern, NORWAY Posts: 389 |
I took quite some time to investigate what tyres to choose. Long story short: I decided to go for Conti 4x4 IceContact. Check them out. Also check out Nokian SU-5. Nokian will also introduce R-SUV which are supposed to be better, but they will not be available before around December/January. Tell us what you decide. 2008 Freelander 2 HSE TD4 Automatic, Caspian Blue, Alpaca, Moon roof, Exclusive pack. |
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15th Nov 2007 10:58 am |
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Tim in Scotland Member Since: 12 Mar 2006 Location: All at sea Posts: 875 |
Highbridgeflyer here is my understanding of how DSC works as explained to me on 4 different LRE training courses by the guys at Land Rover. DSC is there to stop you rolling the car, it isn't a traction control- you have that as well as DSC. DSC monitors the brakes, throttle, steering and traction control (which is why it is also fitted to most modern 2WD drive cars as well as 4x4's) and there are also a couple of accelerometers. somewhere on the car too. If the computer for the DSc sense that you are doing what it thinks are panic maneouvres - braking very hard at the same time as wrenching the steering from side to side or loosing traction and the car might be weaving from side to side thus upsetting the accelerometers then it thinks you are about to crash and need to stop asap, so it cuts the engine power but doesn't stop it. If however you are driving in sand, mud or snow then often if you loose traction you come on and off the throttle hard, wrench the steering to use the tyre sidewalls to try to get grip and also trigger the TC then it will think the same thing...................... the last thing you want in those conditions is for the computer to suddenly cut the engine power, so you have the ability to disable the DSC. Car makers have realised that in snowy conditions in a 2WD car you may want to do the same thing which is why the sensible makers also give you an inhibit switch for the DSC in their cars. There are plenty of makers who don't give you this option and their cars will be totally useless in snow! That is why the DEFAULT for DSC is always on and you have to physically switch it off and not the other way round - it is a safety device not a traction device How can carbon have a footprint, it has no feet? Now driving - RRE Coupe Dynamic Lux Auto with Plus pack, Fuji White, Ebony, SD4 with tow pack Gone - 2010MY FFRR TDv8 Stornoway and Ivory, Privacy - the pace of a TDv8 RRS, the incomparable grace of a Range Rover Gone but will be missed- RRS Tdv8 HSE Stornoway Grey with Ebony Leather Gone (only a little missed) RRS Tdv6 2.7SE Giverny Green/Aspen Defender 90 County HT in Epsom Green |
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15th Nov 2007 5:19 pm |
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gorjant Member Since: 10 Dec 2006 Location: Macedonia Posts: 65 |
Then why the TR doesn't disble DSC automatically when in snow mode? I think that is the point of the TR to set all things neceseary for driving in different terrains. BTW I have Mercedes A-Class which doesn't allow turning off the ESP and I din't have any problem driving in snow (of course with winter tyres). |
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16th Nov 2007 12:53 pm |
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npinks Member Since: 28 Jun 2007 Location: Ls25 Posts: 20090 |
I can confirm, the TR system does change the senitivity of the Tranction Control and DSC, even the Land Rover Experiance guys said to me in certain situations to gain more grip it is advisable to turn off the DSC.
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16th Nov 2007 3:58 pm |
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VIKING Member Since: 22 Sep 2007 Location: Stavern, NORWAY Posts: 389 |
npinks, I am sure i somehow must misunderstand what you are saying. I read the above as if you say ABS is better turned off when driving on snow. This is very, very wrong, so I am sure I somehow misunderstood what you were saying. This film shows the difference using ABS and not using it. (and Traction Control, and ESP, and a little bit of what it means to drive on ice & snow) 2008 Freelander 2 HSE TD4 Automatic, Caspian Blue, Alpaca, Moon roof, Exclusive pack. |
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16th Nov 2007 4:25 pm |
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npinks Member Since: 28 Jun 2007 Location: Ls25 Posts: 20090 |
Viking
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16th Nov 2007 9:32 pm |
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VIKING Member Since: 22 Sep 2007 Location: Stavern, NORWAY Posts: 389 |
npinks.
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16th Nov 2007 9:56 pm |
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carlfraz Member Since: 10 Apr 2007 Location: Minkies lap dancing club Posts: 839 |
I need to defend Npinks strongly at this point ....I too had been told when working for Audi that the ABS is to be switched off in snow as you will stop quicker as the snow builds 'a brick' under the front wheels in a lock up situation, rather than with ABS active which will keep the wheels spinning as soon as a lock up of the wheels is felt and all you do is keep rolling for 3 miles unable to skid to a stop. In the east of England we do not get much snow and when we do get 1" the M11 shuts for three days remember everybody So from a practical experience point of view ...we have none and ask Viking on his experiences...however I feel the option would be nice as snow in Denmark, Norway and Sweden is different to the snow we get here in Englad as we are considerably warmer and the snow is much less powdery, but much wetter.
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16th Nov 2007 10:13 pm |
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Tim in Scotland Member Since: 12 Mar 2006 Location: All at sea Posts: 875 |
The "pump braking" you describe is what used to called in the pre ABS days Cadence Braking - apply the brakes until the wheels are just about to lock then release and repeat, it took a huge amount of practise and you really had to know your car quite well to be able to feel when the wheels were about to lock!
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16th Nov 2007 10:16 pm |
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