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whisky-dave[_2_] whisky-dave[_2_] is offline
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Default Why do people clear their driveways of snow?

On Thursday, 19 January 2017 14:25:36 UTC, Rod Speed wrote:
"whisky-dave" wrote in message
...
On Wednesday, 18 January 2017 17:15:18 UTC, Rod Speed wrote:
"whisky-dave" wrote in message
...
On Tuesday, 17 January 2017 16:54:47 UTC, Rod Speed wrote:
whisky-dave wrote
Rod Speed wrote
whisky-dave wrote
James Wilkinson Sword wrote
whisky-dave wrote

But you spend an hour slipping and sliding in it while you're
digging!

I wouldn't.

Then you also wouldn't while just walking across it. In fact
it's
easier
to walk through snow than across cleared snow which can be icy..

Then it hasn't been cleared properly has it.

Not possible to clear a drive way 'properly' in that sense.

Yes it is.

It clearly isnt if you have JUST removed the snow and left it still
icy.

Then you haven't done it properly.
Any fool can throw how water over snow and claim now it's melted it's
no
longer snow so you've cleared the drive.
I would assume your driveway is currently free of ice and snow so how
did
that happen ? magic.



The snow can be blown to another location or shoveled that would be
OK,

Not if its still got ice once the snow has been removed.

but the snow has gone so for some that means the driveway danger is
gone.
Same as those driving on roads might think oh look all the snow is
pilled
up on the side of teh road so the road is safe as it is in summer.
And this is why the black ice warnings start.


you could use hot water and that would work OK provided the
temerature
wasn't zero C or below the water should drain away before it freezes
again.

And when it is below zero C it would be MUCH worse than not doing
that.

Thats when you can add salt which is why gritting lorries in the UK put
salt down when the temp is likely to drop below 1C.
Salted grit will still, freeze below -8 so there's little point but
most
of england rarely gets that low for very long.
If you have temps of -20 there;s no point in usign salt.




Any fool can clear snow away by throwing warm water on it.

You can't clear an entire driveway that way.

yes you can.

Corse you can't, you'd need too many jugs of hot water, ****wit.

Don't use jugs ****wit, stick the garden hose on the hot tap instead of
the cold tap it ain't rocket science.

**** all have any hot water tap threaded to take a hose outside the
house,
****wit.


but you do have hot water inside yuor hose don;t you


Yes, but none of those taps are threaded to
take a hose


The hose can go on the outside of the tap idiot.
Same way you can get hoses that go over bathroom taps so you can have a shower.


and even if they were, that hose
would be inside the ****ing house, ****wit.


So.
All you need is the inteligence to put the hose pipe through a window door or even cat flap. I;ve managed that living on the foirst floor the hose goes out the kitchen window to the garden it's not rocket science.



the same place you fill yuor jug from.


I'm not actually stupid enough to fill a jug
from the hot water tap, even if you are.


So how would you throw hot water over snow then ?


Why must you tape be threaded


Because thats the only sensible way to attach a hose to it, ****wit.


No have you never heard of Hose clamps, the clues in the title, and as yuo;'re cluless here's a picture.
https://www.rapidonline.com/rolson-6...rtment-13-0280



most of the hoses I've seen and used don;t have threads


The fitting that attaches it to the tap does, ****wit.


They don't have to ****wit.



and teh tapes in the house haven't either.


The cold water taps for the washing machine and dishwasher do, ****wit.


Mine don't you are meant to connect those to the pipes not the tap otherwiose yuo wouldn;lt be able to use the kitchen tap when the washing machine is attached. I can use my kitchen tap to fill my kettle evemn when the washing machine is filling itself upm with water.