Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast
Results 1 to 15 of 18
  1. #1
    Nuclearjack's Avatar
    Nuclearjack is offline I drive!
    Join Date
    Apr 2007
    Location
    Halifax Nova Scotia
    Posts
    689

    So the snow is here :(

    I know how to drive in the snow. I drive in the snow alot. I delivered pizzas in the snow for 7 or 8 years so I was out in the worst of the worst during snow storms.

    But the new thing for me is the rear wheel drive. I have always had front wheel drive and unusually compacts. This will be my first year for a rear wheel drive and traction control.

    I have two worries.
    First is driving on the highway when the roads are snow covered. Any time something goes wrong on the highway its the back tires breaking loose and the car 360 ing off the road. So I wonder what the 300 will be like.

    The second is up a slippery hill. From what I have seen if the back tires are spinning trying to make it up a hill then the back end will start to slide left and right. I followed a car/truck once that had the curb on one side and another lane of traffic and every time he touched the gas his back-end headed toward the next lane. This made it hard as hell for him to get anywhere.


    Oh one more question. Whats the deal with Sandbags in the trunk? I know the old timers are used to this with their pickup trucks but what about the 300? and how much weight would you need to add to the trunk to make a difference? I expect anything less then 200 pounds wouldnt even be noticed

  2. #2
    chance6384's Avatar
    chance6384 is offline Supporting Vendor
    Join Date
    Jul 2007
    Location
    Monroeville PA
    Posts
    438
    Yep...snows either here or on the way... with luck though... wont get a heck of a lot... hate driven in it.


    Tell you what...if you got the right rubber... it makes a lot a difference. I used to drive a pontiac trans am V8 through the winter.... as long as you use your head... you should be fine... but like I said..right rubber makes a world of difference. I actually took a car back that had tread patterns that were strictly for wet and dry...not snow. They sucked in snow.

    Rear wheel isnt bad... what do you think they got around with when rear wheel was the only?

    just realize...at least til you get the feel of it... youre driving a big car... lot more of it to control.

    Time for the 2009 LX and Beyond Nationals

  3. #3
    lafrad's Avatar
    lafrad is offline Zomg.


    Join Date
    Feb 2004
    Location
    Muskego, WI
    Posts
    6,828
    Keep 50% to a full tank of gas, a sand bag or two, and a couple water-softener bags of salt... (40 lb-ers) and it will keep the rear tires biting in great, and give you resources to use if you ever really need em.

    Remember, too much weight makes it harder to STOP.

    Also, all 4 snow tires will let the car handle almost anything that is over a paved surface.... so, its a good investment.
    2006 Charger R/T w/R&T - Black | Electronics Convenience Group | Sunroof | CMR | Police Steelies

    Experience is that marvelous thing that enables you to recognize a mistake when you make it again - Franklin P. Jones
    Insanity: doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results. - Albert Einstein

  4. #4
    Token's Avatar
    Token is online now First AWD LX in the 12's N/A
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
    Location
    Center of the LX Universe
    Posts
    7,904
    That's the best advice right there.

    Get 4 actual winter tires. All the difference in the world.
    FRI Econo Heads & FRI Sidewinder: Installed @ BFNY by Hemi31 with special guest Fnkychkn, JBA Shorties, JBA/HHP hi-flow catted mids, stock SRT8 cat-back, C&L CAI.
    HUGE thanks to Hemiwagn and HalfFast Performance for making it all possible.
    12.645@108.18

  5. #5
    lafrad's Avatar
    lafrad is offline Zomg.


    Join Date
    Feb 2004
    Location
    Muskego, WI
    Posts
    6,828
    Oh yea, my 392 made it though all last winter and I NEVER had a problem ANYWHERE... and I was still able to drive up my steep driveway with 3" of snow on it.

    I did what I listed in my last post....
    2006 Charger R/T w/R&T - Black | Electronics Convenience Group | Sunroof | CMR | Police Steelies

    Experience is that marvelous thing that enables you to recognize a mistake when you make it again - Franklin P. Jones
    Insanity: doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results. - Albert Einstein

  6. #6
    Nuclearjack's Avatar
    Nuclearjack is offline I drive!
    Join Date
    Apr 2007
    Location
    Halifax Nova Scotia
    Posts
    689
    financially Im still reeling from the $4000 kick in the face for the new transmission so winter tires are not going to happen. Luckly I have almost new all seasons.

    Ok so if I have my math right the V6 is 3776 pounds and the split is 54/46 so the front is 2039 and the back is 1737 which means I need 302 pounds in the trunk to make it 50/50

  7. #7
    FOHN_JARGO's Avatar
    FOHN_JARGO is offline Ka CHOW!
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Location
    Bella Vista Arkansas
    Posts
    4,510
    I would be surprised if you had to add any weight at all.

    I know Arkansas winter can't touch a Canada winter but the snow we did get last year and the year before caused zero problems.

    The only time I got tire spin was when I turned esp off and did doughnuts in the grocery store parking lot!

  8. #8
    gn300's Avatar
    gn300 is offline Tipmaster G
    Join Date
    Nov 2004
    Location
    Nova Scotia canada # 1313
    Posts
    6,743
    Snows, a couple of sandbags ,or a body!


    Steer into a skid ,there are lots of empty parking lots around go play get som confidence with the big car.

    Coution! stay away from light poles.

    Does it have traction control?

  9. #9
    MikeEast's Avatar
    MikeEast is offline Now sporting dual R/T's!
    Join Date
    Sep 2004
    Location
    Ducktown, Georgia
    Posts
    9,275
    Always LOOK where you want to go and the chances of that happening are better. Traction control can be a real pain in some scenarios - the ex's Olds Alero wouldn't even make it up the driveway when it was snowing, it sensed a little wheelspin and clamped on the brakes - disconcerting when that happens.

    I put Bridgestone Blizzaks on my 92 Thunderbird and gained a whole new respect for the 4 good tires concept, that little car was better in the snow than my 4x4 F150, even the ex thought nothing of going to town in a blizzard with it and that's saying a whole lot. They are worth the bucks.

    Mike
    "Now, I may not be an expert either, but I do lay the keyboard down on occasion, wipe the donut crumbs off my face, put my pants on and go outside into the light... and work on the car." - MattRobertson
    http://photobucket.com/albums/v619/MikeEast/
    (AirHammer, FRI Sidewinder, JBA shortys/highflows, Zoomers, Diablo, Labonte, Pedders, RazorsEdge, HSP Mounts, Silver Box,BT PinkThingy, AMG Paddle Shifters) 3.07 SRT rear, 13.302@106.15

  10. #10
    Jaak's Avatar
    Jaak is offline Livin' the Mild Life in South Oakville.

    Join Date
    May 2005
    Location
    '07 SuperBee SRT8,'06 Magnum SRT8, '11 Chrysler 300
    Posts
    23,600
    These cars are pretty good in the snow and really good if AWD.

    I'm in no rush to see the stuff, but even so, it's usually not bad even with all seasons in good shape, here in Toronto.

    You will need to retrain yourself though. Where gassing a FWD will help pull you out of a slide in a corner, on an RWD it will help put you in to it...

    When it snows, find a big parking lot (empty) and get to know it.

    The ESP is pretty smart on these cars as well.

    Get the snows as soon as you can afford them. Cheaper than body work.
    2006 Magnum SRT8 - 11.85@117
    2007 SuperBee SRT8 - 12.21@117
    2011 300 Limited - Who cares, it's good on gas and the chick digs it.




  11. #11
    GoofyTimL's Avatar
    GoofyTimL is offline 300C H.E. and MSRT8 in WV... IS Heaven!
    Join Date
    Oct 2005
    Location
    Near Parkersburg, WV
    Posts
    7,064
    Got two snows for the rear of the 300C last winter. Will be getting two more for the all around this season.

    Going to go with the stock RSAs on the Magnum for this season... we'll see about next year.
    Still in love with my first wife, and first car ('68 Charger)... Still have the wife!


    Member #4079.

  12. #12
    hemicanucksfan's Avatar
    hemicanucksfan is offline so many projects, so little money
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Location
    toronto area (ajax)
    Posts
    6,257
    i'm jealous. i can't wait for the snow. i have both a fwd compact and the magnum. i'll take the magnum in the snow any day. much more predictable with rwd imo. when it snows, i'll just go for a drive for the heck of it. unfortunately toronto doesn't get good snow falls like i grew up with in bc (or you'll get in halifax). like a few people have said, find a big open lot and go find out what your car can do. they're a blast. remember too, that if it's slippery you may want to disengage esp sometimes. if you're trying to accelerate and the wheels spin, the car puts on the binders. kinda counter-productive. i once saw a guy in a g35 literally take almost two minutes to drive past the store i was working at because whenever he hit the gas, the car hit the brakes.
    2010 LX&Beyond Nat'ls Best In Show Magnum Daily Driver
    2011 LX&Beyond Nat'ls Best In Show Magnum Weekend Driver
    2-toned, trufiber srt hood, 22"x9.5" gray Foose Nitrous, colour-matched headlights w/halos, 6000K HIDs (lows/fogs), tinted marker lights, colour-matched fog bezels, tinted tails, Airhammer, Eibach Pro-kit, Predator, Edelbrock headers/cat-back, jba hi-flow cats, 82*C thermostat (180*F), remote start, MDS indicator, Mopar hitch. So far.


  13. #13
    Deuces is offline Predator Installed!!!
    Join Date
    Oct 2006
    Location
    Roselle, IL
    Posts
    423
    Steer into the power-slide and enjoy the ride!!! HAL sets some pretty set limits, so unless you are getting really crazy or disabled the traction control, you should be good!
    '06 Stone White SE - Predator 93 Octane Tune Installed! ~~~ SOLD ~~~

  14. #14
    bigjim's Avatar
    bigjim is offline Damn Fast Grandpa!!
    Join Date
    Oct 2004
    Location
    LaFargeville, NY / Bolton, ON
    Posts
    5,622
    My Magnum is the best snow car I have ever had, bar none! 4 Blizzacks are worth their weight in gold. I was departing Toronto for Mass two winters ago in 8" of fresh powder that had NOT been plowed, it was the first fall of snow, so NO sand or salt at all had been put down and no snow banks to see where the road really was! 80 mph (130 kph) on 407 at 3:30 am on a Saturday with HAL busily at work constantly flashing the yellow skid marks at me and the ABS pump buzzing its heart out doing individual braking. I had to see how much was HAL and how much was me, I slowed to 25mph and pushed the esp button. I couldn't get over 35mph with it off. I reset it and went on my way at 60mph with the skid marks flashing away! I think I saw a white Malibu come down the on ramp at one point with its lights going but he showed the headlights - taillights - headlights and dissappeared.

    Get the snows and enjoy the car!
    05 Magnum RT 5.7 (Member ALLPAR.com 200,000 mile club) Rockinsrt8 shifter, Hemi reg #164 266,666 miles (c'mon John, I slowed down! NOT)

    Sidewinder, 6.1 pushrods, springs, underdrive pulley, SRT exhaust (donated by NHDave) headers to tips, all installed by Hemi31! Quaife, certain Pedders bushes installed, SRT Nivomats and Bilsteins. Police rotors and pads. HIR. Predator. LMI.

    1:19 NJMP Lightning
    1:45 Mosport

  15. #15
    Nuclearjack's Avatar
    Nuclearjack is offline I drive!
    Join Date
    Apr 2007
    Location
    Halifax Nova Scotia
    Posts
    689
    Blizzaks would be sweet I have no doubt. I still rememeber the time I went from 1/2 worn all season to 4 blizzaks. It had actaully snowed the day I got them. They are amazing.

    I didnt know about this though

    The Blizzak's Multicell tread compound comprises the top 55 percent of the tires' tread depth, with a standard winter tread compound comprising the remaining 45 percent.

Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast

Share This Thread

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •