Home · FAQ · New Posts · My Posts · PMs · Search · Members · Members Map · Calendar · Profile · Donate · Register · Log In |
Home > General > Driving on snow |
|
|
VIKING Member Since: 22 Sep 2007 Location: Stavern, NORWAY Posts: 389 |
Are you absolutely sure about this? We shall also use the size in registration card, but a little flexibility is allowed if that ensures better safety. But: If so, then it is even more important to have good tyres. Look at Conti, Nokian and Bridgestone. (The ones I mentioned initially) But it MUST be SUV-tyres. But can you have a thinner tyre than 235? If so, I recommend that for driving on snow. Please tell what tyres you finally end up with. 2008 Freelander 2 HSE TD4 Automatic, Caspian Blue, Alpaca, Moon roof, Exclusive pack. |
||
16th Oct 2007 5:43 pm |
|
attox Member Since: 24 Jul 2007 Location: Genova Posts: 93 |
Unfortunately in some different areas around the Alps you are obliged to carry chains on board and sometime Authorities impose you to use them even if you have snow tyres and 4x4 traction, overriding the general driving code which considers chains and snow tyres as equal substitutes. It happened to me in Italy, France and Austria. |
||
16th Oct 2007 5:43 pm |
|
VIKING Member Since: 22 Sep 2007 Location: Stavern, NORWAY Posts: 389 |
Well, you do get there, -also with chains. Better to have chains on your wheels than on your arms, on your way to jail. 2008 Freelander 2 HSE TD4 Automatic, Caspian Blue, Alpaca, Moon roof, Exclusive pack. |
||
16th Oct 2007 5:47 pm |
|
attox Member Since: 24 Jul 2007 Location: Genova Posts: 93 |
Yes unfortunately we cannot use other sizes unless you apply for a new special registration (too complicate, you should be a car company!) I understand in your place they are more flexible because of the severe weather conditions. I have been twice in north Scandinavia in the winter and I had a lot of fun! (Of course with the right tyres, I remember with studs). I will let you know my choice as soon as I will sort it out. Just a curiosity. Do you use metal rims for your winter tyres? |
||
16th Oct 2007 6:00 pm |
|
VIKING Member Since: 22 Sep 2007 Location: Stavern, NORWAY Posts: 389 |
We use alluminum rims. Oh, one more thing about chains. Remember you must have four of them. One for each wheel. On frontwheel / backwheel-driven cars two is sufficient (for the pulling wheels). But if you have only two on a 4x4, you will destroy the car. I mention this because not everyone is aware of this fact. 2008 Freelander 2 HSE TD4 Automatic, Caspian Blue, Alpaca, Moon roof, Exclusive pack. |
||
16th Oct 2007 6:08 pm |
|
attox Member Since: 24 Jul 2007 Location: Genova Posts: 93 |
From page 192 of the Owner manual (english version downloaded from LR site):
|
||
16th Oct 2007 6:32 pm |
|
pelyma Member Since: 19 Feb 2006 Location: Patching Posts: 366 |
TR will help you a lot more than you think possible, but it won't help you stop D4 HSE Lux for me
|
||
16th Oct 2007 7:01 pm |
|
npinks Member Since: 28 Jun 2007 Location: Ls25 Posts: 20090 |
i have spoken to a few companies on snowchains and they all say 2 chain is fine for 4x4's |
||
16th Oct 2007 7:12 pm |
|
VIKING Member Since: 22 Sep 2007 Location: Stavern, NORWAY Posts: 389 |
Then they dont know what they are talking about. If you put chains on the front wheels only, they would have a bigger rolling distance than the back-wheel, unsyncronizing them, then destroying them. Frontwheels and backwheels will roll slitely differently, and in the end they have rolled a different distance, which in turn will destroy the car. Believe me, some 4x4-owners have discovered this. To me, this is quite obvious after I had been made aware of the fact by motor-experts. I mean, think: Back-wheels and frontwheels running a different distance! That is of no importance to a front/backwheel-driven car, as the other wheels are just rolling. Not pulling. But when all 4 wheels are to pull, the must pull simultaneously, not separately. Come on guys, it is obvious when you think about it. 2008 Freelander 2 HSE TD4 Automatic, Caspian Blue, Alpaca, Moon roof, Exclusive pack. Last edited by VIKING on 16th Oct 2007 7:57 pm. Edited 1 time in total |
||
16th Oct 2007 7:36 pm |
|
Dave Member Since: 04 Jul 2007 Location: Somewhere Near You Posts: 2666 |
Doesn't this car have a centre diff (or LR's version of one) , in which case rolling distance is irrellevant. ______________________
|
||
16th Oct 2007 7:44 pm |
|
NightFox Member Since: 11 May 2007 Location: North Shropshire Posts: 353 |
I would have said the same (not that I understand the technical side of these things), but looking at the section on towing the vehicle in the owner's handbook, it says: CAUTION The vehicle should only be towed with four wheels on the ground. Towing with two wheels on the ground will result in serious damage to the transmission. I guess this is in effect the same issue. |
||
16th Oct 2007 7:54 pm |
|
VIKING Member Since: 22 Sep 2007 Location: Stavern, NORWAY Posts: 389 |
I rest my case. 2008 Freelander 2 HSE TD4 Automatic, Caspian Blue, Alpaca, Moon roof, Exclusive pack. |
||
16th Oct 2007 7:59 pm |
|
Dave Member Since: 04 Jul 2007 Location: Somewhere Near You Posts: 2666 |
Yes I agree with that statement because there isn't any way to select a "neutral position" on the transfer box which would isolate front and back axles from each other (my old Jeep Cherokee had one). But, as the vehicle is marketed as a "Full Time 4WD" then there has to be a centre diff as I stated previously therefore rolling distance is irrelevant. ______________________ 2011 Full Fat RR 4.4 TDV8 2012 FL2 SD4 Auto HSE 2013 Kawasaki Versys 650 |
||
16th Oct 2007 8:08 pm |
|
boiledgnat Member Since: 15 Nov 2006 Location: Bucks Posts: 283 |
Sorry, a bit late into this thread, but here's my twopenneth... I drove on snow at the beginning of the year during my LRE half day awareness. The car was standard with standard tyres, and the snow was loosely packed - only about 5 other cars out on the course that day. The instructor made me do a little test to see the effect of the terrain response unit - firstly to leave it on road use and then accelerate hard. This caused lots of snaking down the track. We then put it into snow mode, and try as I might to lose the back end, it held firm. So, In my (brief) experience, normal tyres and terrain response will be adequate for most snowy conditions. |
||
16th Oct 2007 8:15 pm |
|
|
All times are GMT |
< Previous Topic | Next Topic > |
Posting Rules
|
Site Copyright © 2006-2024 Futuranet Ltd & Martin Lewis