Hi Friends,
I was looking through the forum site, and found little to no information on "How to handle bad driving weather Conditions"
Surely there must be some A THREAD OR STICKY for truckers when they encounter
- icy roads
- tornadoes
- rain conditions
- etc.
Can someone point me in the right direction?
Thanks very much!
Bad Weather Driving.... ?
Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by jjsiegal, Jun 28, 2014.
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JJ Keller makes videos about hazardous weather driving for big trucks...they are pretty good in my opinion.
70s_driver Thanks this. -
yah when it starts to snow real bad and hte roads get icy, I PARK, fi they tell me i have to throw chains on I PARK
70s_driver and Tonythetruckerdude Thank this. -
Icy roads...slow going til you can find a safe place to stop...
tornadoes....never try to out-run one , get to the safest place you can find and stop...
rain conditions....slow down , increase your following distance by at the least double , keep your lights on , if it gets really heavy , find a place you can safely stop....
You'll notice I said to safely stop in all those scenarios...by that I mean get off of the roadway , into a parking lot /truck-stop....never pull over to the side of the road and stop...very dangerous to do that.
Main thing here too , is to never let a dispatcher/road manager/supervisor/boss tell you that you MUST keep going....use your best judgement and if your late , your late...no load in the world worth your own or some else life....nothing....better to be out of work than to widow your wife and orphan your kids.... -
Tony said it all. When it comes to Ice, Tornadoes, Hurricanes, there are no professionals- just the lucky and the unlucky. In at least those three, its better to be a Spectator than a Participant.
Moving Forward, bergy and Tonythetruckerdude Thank this. -
If you need to chain-up, park it. I've only thrown chains one time. Last fall, I was 400 lbs overweight so I threw the trailer chains. I hope whoever found them needed them.
BROKENSPROKET, allniter and OPUS 7 Thank this. -
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The same way you drive your car in bad weather.
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1. Never be "afraid" to slow down in difficult weather. Truckers will always be screaming on by you, but go at the pace you are comfortable with, not their pace. As a rule of thumb think of 45 mph as the top speed in snow and ice.
2. Never outrun your visibility. Fog, dust storms, snow storms, or heavy rain can sometimes bring traffic to a standstill (or it should).
3. In slick conditions coasting is your friend. By this I mean if you feel your rig getting squirrely, the best bet is to EASE off the throttle and let it coast for a bit to straighten itself out.
4. In slick conditions every change in momentum needs to be gradual: acceleration, braking, or turning.
5. Lay off the Jake Brake in slick conditions. SMOOTH braking with the service brakes is far better.
6. If you get under 35 mph in slick conditions, then lock the inter axle differential.
7. Find a safe place to park it if you have to.
8. Learn how to chain up. If you run the west then the adage that you should always park it if you have to chain up doesn't apply, unless you want to go hungry. If you are under load waiting for "no chains required" signs on I-70 over the Rockies you might be parked for days, weeks, or months.
9. Bring Kitty Litter. Very helpful for getting out of slick parking lots if you don't want to chain up and then unchain on a dry road.bergy and briarhopper Thank this.
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