Almost crashed at 60mph!!!
#1
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Almost crashed at 60mph!!!
Going to see this girl about 10 miles away to take her to the snow. I'm about to take a right hand turn on a freeway on ramp with a Jetta following me. Its about a 35 degree right hander. Anyway, I entered doing approx 60 (too fast...not excessively since I've taken it at 70mph before) and all of a sudden my back end gives out. I'm completely sideways in the middle of the road and I have my tires locked up. It straightens out and I skid off the road. This is getting REALLY annoying. Its been happening ALL the time. I look like an idiot when my rear end comes out. It happened in my school parking lot too.
So, what do I do? New tires? Thanks guys!
So, what do I do? New tires? Thanks guys!
Last edited by 91Toyota; 11-11-2008 at 03:28 PM.
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Well, did you make it to the girl in time?, thats all that matters
but realy, did you make it?
Are the old ones warn out?
do the "Penny Check"
but realy, did you make it?
Are the old ones warn out?
do the "Penny Check"
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1st thing to do:
learn how to drive (some call it defensive driving... in my experience, understanding operating a vehicle at the 'technical level' leads to offensive driving: acting before other drivers do something)... oh and that leads to...
2nd thing to consider:
Newtonian physics (paraphrased: objects at rest or in motion tend to resist changes to their state; an action is met with an equal-yet-opposite reaction; gravity acting through friction keeps your truck controllable and any time either one of those forces is acted against, you're in trouble) which basically means that if you lost control and have violated #3:
3rd thing to remember:
no woman is worth wrecking your ride.
learn how to drive (some call it defensive driving... in my experience, understanding operating a vehicle at the 'technical level' leads to offensive driving: acting before other drivers do something)... oh and that leads to...
2nd thing to consider:
Newtonian physics (paraphrased: objects at rest or in motion tend to resist changes to their state; an action is met with an equal-yet-opposite reaction; gravity acting through friction keeps your truck controllable and any time either one of those forces is acted against, you're in trouble) which basically means that if you lost control and have violated #3:
3rd thing to remember:
no woman is worth wrecking your ride.
Last edited by abecedarian; 11-11-2008 at 03:41 PM.
#6
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1st thing to do:
learn how to drive (some call it defensive driving... in my experience, understanding operating a vehicle at the 'technical level' leads to offensive driving: acting before other drivers do something)... oh and that leads to...
2nd thing to consider:
Newtonian physics (paraphrased: objects at rest or in motion tend to resist changes to their state; an action is met with an equal-yet-opposite reaction; gravity acting through friction keeps your truck controllable and any time either one of those forces is acted against, you're in trouble) which basically means that if you lost control and have violated #3:
3rd thing to remember:
no woman is worth wrecking your ride.
learn how to drive (some call it defensive driving... in my experience, understanding operating a vehicle at the 'technical level' leads to offensive driving: acting before other drivers do something)... oh and that leads to...
2nd thing to consider:
Newtonian physics (paraphrased: objects at rest or in motion tend to resist changes to their state; an action is met with an equal-yet-opposite reaction; gravity acting through friction keeps your truck controllable and any time either one of those forces is acted against, you're in trouble) which basically means that if you lost control and have violated #3:
3rd thing to remember:
no woman is worth wrecking your ride.
and what kind of ride your in
#7
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I know how to drive. I'm not gonna say I'm the best driver. But I take risks and chances. Each and everyone I learn from. Yeah...i guess in your terms it must be "common sense" that the back would slide out right? Considering my other truck which was 200lbs heavier AND was a foot longer (long bed) NEVER did this.
She is cute.
She is cute.
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#8
Slow down for corners.
A couple bags of sand (aim for ~100lbs). Sounds like you need snow tires/ cable chains. Ultimately though, how you drive it is going to have the greatest effect. Slow down. Imagine you have an un-teathered grandfather clock standing upright in the truck bed.
A couple bags of sand (aim for ~100lbs). Sounds like you need snow tires/ cable chains. Ultimately though, how you drive it is going to have the greatest effect. Slow down. Imagine you have an un-teathered grandfather clock standing upright in the truck bed.
#9
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Slow down for corners.
A couple bags of sand (aim for ~100lbs). Sounds like you need snow tires/ cable chains. Ultimately though, how you drive it is going to have the greatest effect. Slow down. Imagine you have an un-teathered grandfather clock standing upright in the truck bed.
A couple bags of sand (aim for ~100lbs). Sounds like you need snow tires/ cable chains. Ultimately though, how you drive it is going to have the greatest effect. Slow down. Imagine you have an un-teathered grandfather clock standing upright in the truck bed.
Sounds like I just need to slow down...at least I didn't smack the guard rail...I'm thinking if I trash the body work I'll get fiberglass parts and slowly turn her into a pre-runner.
Looks like I'll just slow down
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yep.
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and I'm sure she'll respect you more if you wreck your truck while going to see her. that would ruin her day/night (depending) and when the reason got out: "He was going fast and lost control of his truck around a corner he's driven for years, so he should've known what to do."
yep.
yep.
It is totally my fault. There is no one to blame except me...I was behind the wheel and speeding.
I have driven it for 3+ years now and never have had that happen. Guess its just the sweet 20/80 weight distribution this truck has and my speeding.
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True. Sometimes i give it gas and get her sideways for fun. lol. But sometimes its just annoying as hell.
Okay, rear tread on tires are worn out. Looks like I'll have to replace them. The fronts have plenty of tread.
Okay, rear tread on tires are worn out. Looks like I'll have to replace them. The fronts have plenty of tread.
#16
Add some weight, you need to for snow driving anyway. I have a piece of 1.25" plate, 24x14 (150 lbs or so) that I have had in 4 different trucks, works great
...there a not a lot of on ramps that I can think of down in Salem you can take in a pick up at 60-70 miles per hour..Schwab rotates their tires for free every 5K miles...
Glad you still got to see the girl
edit: I guess I should have mentioned that the steel has a 3/4" plywood frame that fits between the wheel wells and back edge of the bed that the metal sits in a cut out. It keeps the metal from sliding around. It than has a metal strap that runs over the top of it. Between that and a rubber matt, it has never moved even during winter wheeling.
Right now though the hunk of steel is between trucks, not needed in my Tahoe or my Trekker.
...there a not a lot of on ramps that I can think of down in Salem you can take in a pick up at 60-70 miles per hour..Schwab rotates their tires for free every 5K miles...
Glad you still got to see the girl
edit: I guess I should have mentioned that the steel has a 3/4" plywood frame that fits between the wheel wells and back edge of the bed that the metal sits in a cut out. It keeps the metal from sliding around. It than has a metal strap that runs over the top of it. Between that and a rubber matt, it has never moved even during winter wheeling.
Right now though the hunk of steel is between trucks, not needed in my Tahoe or my Trekker.
Last edited by dropzone; 11-12-2008 at 09:54 AM. Reason: added part about plywood frame