graball wrote:
When i see melting snow dropping off the trees...
When the temp guage says it is 3 degrees outside
And if they're still on the trees? Also, that applies to air temp, not road surface temp (air having less thermal mass, and air can be leading the warming of the road).
graball wrote:
and my window washers start working when the were previously frozen.
Could that have anything to do with a warm engine or hot exhaust nearby? (Not everyone has a rear-engine car.)
graball wrote:
when you can hear the squish of slush under your whheels
That happens when slush is on ice (I had exactly that in my local area last month).
graball wrote:
or see spray coming up from the wheels of the car in front
That can also happen with melting ice (not just melted ice).
When any of these don't occur, do you assume a risk of ice?
graball wrote:
This is why you can't set an exact speed for safe driving in winter or summer...it's going to vary second by second. This is why we need to be alert and concentrtate on the road and surroundings and not your speedo.
I agree with that.
No one mentioned anything about speedo watching. Indeed I suspect those as the limit would be watching their speedo more than those "rediculously" below it.
Yes all road users need to concentrate and be alert, but we also need to assess risks and potential limitations.
graball wrote:
funy enough our local M54 had a nasty yesterday morning (snowing at the time) and the dual A5 it leads onto had a nasty (ice) accident a few days before, so even major roads and motorways cannot be assumed to be safer than rural back roads.
Surely you must agree that cherry picking of local instances of events doesn't prove a trend. I'm sure there were a lot of accidents all around given the conditions.
graball wrote:
...you do have to look around and if the majority of drivers are doing 40MPH safely, you have to ask yourself, why am I doing 20MPH? Obviously if you are stuck in the middle of nowhere, you cannot judge your speed accordingly to the majority and must drive at a speed that you feel safe at but then you aren't likely to be inconveniencing a whole line of others.
If on a single carriageway road (and not being repeatedly overtaken), how can one know they're going slower than everyone else? (unless people keep crashing into the back of them). This is an unacknowledged issue I raised in a previous post.
I should say: I'm not in favour of everyone driving at really low speeds; I just feel your response towards those that do it in these kinds of conditions is a bit unfair.
I don't suppose you could keep all your related responses within one single post?