samandben wrote:
.......... and ask again….Do Winter Drivers need to be better informed? "
In simple answer .... who can they be 'informed' of what, and from whom and when and how ?
For a driver to be the best they can possibly be IMHO they need to :
1) ensure that they obtain all the best information for themselves, prior to each drive, during each drive and re-assess at the end of that drive and prepare for the journey back.
Information from : weather forecasts, (TV, radio Internet etc) local authorities (Council gritting services - Highway Weather Lines (expensive numbers), Information from car instruments, then information in the news, or travel services, sat. nav. info too (SOME of this info might be gained over prior days and even weeks).
2) be responsible for their actions.
3) do everything possible to learn about how to reduce their exposure to danger, (at the earliest possible moment), and what to look out for especially with developing hazards.
4) learn as much as possible and educate themselves as well as time, budgets and ability will allow.
5) bearing in mind that inattention and frustration is the biggest cause of accidents, to try to concentrate on driving at all times - keeping our mind on the job at hand and our eyes on the road.
Now in answer to the oversteer anticlockwise skid - what would I do (apart from TRY to not get into it in the first place) - well :
a number of things ; (if I was driving my RWD car

)
a) steer into skid (NOTE always ensure thumbs NEVER go through the steering wheel - at times like this you need thumbs outside of the wheel to help you have better grip and better control of the steering wheel plus in this situ - if your wheel needs turning quickly it can break your thumbs if they rest 'in' the wheel),
b) pump the brakes,
c) adjust the steering appropriately,
d) keeping a wary eye on surroundings, and prior vision of the road, rapid estimation of where grip maybe and try to be ready for it.
e) I would not have *
fear* as I have experience of how to handle a skid, so I am thinking no chance that I am panicking ... fear can make you do nothing, act incorrectly (through lack of knowledge & experience), do all the wrong things, forget what happened after (can apply to everyone!).
The steering will re-grip as soon as the grip is returned to the rear / front wheels, (depending what you drive).
f) Further decisions to - less damage accident, which part of car might hit what, and what control I will / may have as grip is returned, or to
deliberately spin the wheels, let steering go and pull on the handbrake etc etc etc will ALL depend on the road surface, vision knowledge of road prior (and during) event, where the are is 'heading' and what further avoiding action I may choose or need to do, if and when I can/appropriately timed.
g) If my actions are 'trailing' (or behind) my skidding car, then I might be dealing with additional skids or over-reactions, so my input into the steering especially, may need to be 'less and more' with the steering and throttle etc ...
From what you have said the spin was a anticlockwise (nearside or oversteer, and then she grappled to get the steering back; but somehow from spinning anticlockwise to the opposite carriageway, she then returned to her lane and then went backwards over the verge and hit a tree but I am unsure that momentum & gravity might be 'enough', force, for all this. ... I wonder if there is any chance that she put one or more further inputs into the car ? I am not sure that we will ever, know, though, as it is terribly hard for most people to recall these details, with any reliable precision (sadly).
edited for clarification
