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UK diy (uk.d-i-y) For the discussion of all topics related to diy (do-it-yourself) in the UK. All levels of experience and proficency are welcome to join in to ask questions or offer solutions. |
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![]() "Edward W. Thompson" wrote in message ... On Sat, 26 Nov 2005 00:35:12 GMT, dave wrote: On Fri, 25 Nov 2005 22:19:37 +0000 (UTC), Phillip Kyle wrote: "Harry Bloomfield" verbally sodomised in : Brimstone explained on 23/11/2005 : Lots of luvverly snow on the way. Good, good :-) Who wants to bet the usual dickheads will get stuck abd blame someone else.? (Not me, for one) I tend to find that the first taste of it deters the amateurs who either decide to stay at home the next day, or they end up stuck in a ditch. More room for the rest of us. Translation: I'm stupid enough to go out driving in blizzards. Well I saw one of them on the TV news. A woman stuck on Bodmin moor with two young children (not hers) in the back! What a nutter. I mean it's not as if we've had no notice of this snow is it. And can't say I think much of the idiot mother who'd allow her kids to be driven on the motorway by someone else. As a Canadian I am amazed that the slightest smattering of snow brings chaos in a Country that is supposedly technically advanced. 3"-6" of snow is nothing and should be well within the capability of all vehicles on uncleared roads and if not the vehicles are not road worthy. I think the problem lies with the tyres used here. In Canada everyone either drives year round with 'all season' tyres or fit snow tyres for winter. The last vehicle I had in Canada was a Honda Civic with all season tyres which never had a problem in all snow conditions I encountered in Nova Scotia. When I came to the UK I thought I would fit all season tyres to my vehicle. The tyre suppliers I visited had never heard of them and Canadian all season tyres do not meet EEC regulations, go figure! When virtually all vehicles drive on what are really summer tyres, or at least that is how it seems, problems in the snow are inevitable. The problem is the weather. We don't get snow very often so we don't have loads of equipment to deal with it. So when it does fall it isn't cleared from most of the roads. This combined with the average driver having little or no experience on snow (after all we don't have any) causes the problems. We don't use all season tyres because they wear quickly and aren't very good in the wet at speeds around 70+mph. The only real solution is to change the climate which the Americans and Canadians are helping us with. ;-) |