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Chocaholic 01-30-2014 04:13 AM

Has nothing to do with ability. I drove in Michigan winters for 20 years with no issues. Here in Atlanta, you can be completely, safely stopped on untreated ice as your car starts sliding sideways, forward or backward into other cars. Lots of hills and curves, etc. WTF, indeed.

speeder 01-30-2014 04:13 AM

I'm sure that it was very slippery. I just could not believe the effect of a pretty minor snowfall on an entire large city...wow. Snow is not entirely unheard of there, right? Just really rare? Honest question.

I can understand how a southern city would not dedicate the resources for city-wide snow removal equipment when it rarely snows, though. Dozens of large plow trucks and sanders is big $$$.

In Minneapolis, (population 1M), that snowfall would not have even been a snow emergency, meaning no plowing anywhere. Just salt on the freeways to melt the ice.

HardDrive 01-30-2014 04:20 AM

Leaders screwed up down there. If you don't have the gear to deal with the situation, fine. But this wasn't a surprise. Why the hell didn't all levels of government shut down? Why were the kids at school? Why didn't the governor ask employers to keep workers home. It's not the citizens fault, its the rubes in charge.

onewhippedpuppy 01-30-2014 04:34 AM

Quote:

Leaders screwed up down there. If you don't have the gear to deal with the situation, fine. But this wasn't a surprise. Why the hell did't all levels of government shut down? Why were the kids at school? Why didn't the governor ask employers to keep workers home. It's not the citizens fault, its the rubes in charge.
This. We have a small chance starting Friday for a few days of light ice and snow. Crews were out pre-treating the roads yesterday with that brine deicer stuff. It will be a total non-event. If you can't take care of the roads, tell your citizens to stay off of them.

BK911 01-30-2014 04:44 AM

Atlant traffic sucks in perfect weather.

wdfifteen 01-30-2014 05:02 AM

I'm often out before the roads are treated, and yes, snow plows and salt make a HUGE difference. Half an inch of snow becomes ice when it's packed onto the pavement. The problem with Atlanta, as I see it, is that the mayor knew bad weather was coming, knew they weren't prepared to deal with it, and didn't send kids home from school and close government buildings. Cancelling school for a day or two isn't the end of the world, and it's a heck of a lot better to do it proactively than waiting until the day after the roads are turned into parking lots.

Tobra 01-30-2014 05:04 AM

Geez Denis, how many times do you have to be told it is not the snow, it is the ice. When I was in college. It took me 15 hours to drive 25 miles in Oregon. Traffic just stopped at Rice Hill, OR. Every single person that got out of the car to pee, immediately fell down. The only reason I was driving on it at all before traffic stopped and not crashing is that it was dead straight. Well, that and the fact that I had a football player, my brother and two generously proportioned gals in a B733 BMW sedan, gravity was my friend. You could walk easily on the shoulder, where there was snow, even with the sheet of ice on it.

There were teardrop shaped icicles falling from the sky that day. Snowed a foot in a day a few months later in Salem, also a mess. Stayed home and drank Tuaca and apple cider with this national champion triple jumper...

MBAtarga 01-30-2014 05:10 AM

It would have been much worse had it not been for the newly acquired snow plows!

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1391090967.jpg

mattdavis11 01-30-2014 05:23 AM

We had two semi shut downs in central Texas in the last week. The first was pretty bad and they were prepared. The deicing glaze they put down before the ice came caused a bunch of wrecks. Later that evening and next morning the ice came and wiped out much of the Austin area. It really wasn't very bad though.

Tuesday brought ice right at morning rush hour. They weren't prepared. They shut down lots of bridges and overpasses during peak traffic. Austin schools closed, but only after announcing a delayed start the night before. Most places opened at noon though.

I found it as a great opportunity to get some errands done. It was great, no line at the bank drive thru, grocery store was empty, and only one bridge to deal with. Traversing it was no big deal, but yet there were two coppers pacing traffic, behind me.

I found it kind of funny. The GF grew up in Chicago and has made remarks about how it's not a big deal to drive in that kind of weather, yet she turned around those days after a few blocks and waited for the roads to thaw. I told her, although it may be white, it's not snow honey, it's ice.

FLYGEEZER 01-30-2014 05:28 AM

What we need here is........some more global warming. Come on Algore, make it happen.

speeder 01-30-2014 05:47 AM

I'm fully aware that it was icy. Believe it or not, the roads get icy in the great frozen north as well.

I've driven a lot on slippery roads, including driving taxi all winter in college and for a year in the '90s. There were times when it was so slippery with black ice that people would fall instantly when they stepped out of the car. Those conditions truly suck. Maybe Atlanta was completely covered in wet ice...IDK. It just looked like run of the mill snow and ice in the film I saw.

I have lots of gnarly winter driving stories but here is the best/worst one: I'm driving a taxi in college in Mpls., winter of '81/'82. I work nights. I get a call to pick someone up @ Hennepin Co. Medical Center, main hospital downtown. It's late, maybe around midnight.

My taxi was a Ford Fairmont sedan, an $8.00 car that you could kick to death wearing tennis shoes. Two strong guys could tip it over in the long direction.

Anyhow...I arrive at the hospital and the passengers are a young couple from Mexico or Central America who hablared zero English and their newborn baby. They were bringing their baby home. They somehow gave me their address, maybe wrote it down. I can't remember.

We left the hospital and headed for 35W south, the entrance is on the south edge of DT. It was a brutally cold night, probably 15 below zero F. There was almost no traffic. I accelerated down the long entrance ramp at a normal speed and entered the freeway. It seems to me that I was moving across the lanes towards the left lane when I hit black ice and we spun 720 degrees @ 60 mph. There was absolutely nothing to do but enjoy the ride. Thankfully to god, there was no other traffic and we did not bounce off the guardrail.

When we stopped spinning, I turned towards them in the back seat and apologized profusely but I could have been telling them I did it on purpose for all they understood me.

The young father just nodded and I got the car pointed south and continued to their destination without anymore drama. They're probably still telling that story 33 years later.

Black ice is no joke.

stomachmonkey 01-30-2014 05:50 AM

Denis, in Minneapolis and other areas that get snow regularly the population has snow tires, chains and anything else needed to get around.

Here in my area tire shops don't even stock snow tires.

speeder 01-30-2014 05:56 AM

Quote:

Denis, in Minneapolis and other areas that get snow regularly the population has snow tires, chains and anything else needed to get around.<br><br>Here in my area tire shops don't even stock snow tires.
Only a small percentage o people in MN have separate snow tires for winter. I never did. New cars all come with all-season tread and AWD is popular. Chains are very rarely seen, you cannot drive on dry roads with them.

Everyone damn sure has an ice scraper for their windshield, though.

mattdavis11 01-30-2014 06:13 AM

I've used my scraper quit a bit lately. In the picture below it was pointless, why bother if you can't even get in the car. It was encased in ice, sealed shut.

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1391094735.jpg

wdfifteen 01-30-2014 06:30 AM

I can understand how Atlanta happened, given the authorities failure to declare any kind of weather emergency. Sometimes I get lazy and drive the 2WD Chevy 1/2 ton in light snow instead of the 4WD Tundra. The Chevy has all season tires on it and it is like a hog on ice on the slightest cold wet pavement. The Tundra pulls the trailer that I move the plow tractor and snow blower with. If I really want to get anyplace I have to wait for the road crews or unhook the trailer, a job I really, really hate.

AFC-911 01-30-2014 06:32 AM

Georgia Gov. Nathan Deal Calls Winter Storm That Snarled Atlanta 'Unexpected.' Really? - weather.com Officials Come Under Fire for Snow


City Leaders dropped the ball.

Seahawk 01-30-2014 06:35 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by speeder (Post 7883483)
It seems to me that I was moving across the lanes towards the left lane when I hit black ice and we spun 720 degrees @ 60 mph. There was absolutely nothing to do but enjoy the ride. Thankfully to god, there was no other traffic and we did not bounce off the guardrail.

When we stopped spinning, I turned towards them in the back seat and apologized profusely but I could have been telling them I did it on purpose for all they understood me.

The young father just nodded and I got the car pointed south and continued to their destination without anymore drama. They're probably still telling that story 33 years later.

Black ice is no joke.

Good stuff.

My one and only Triple Salchow in a car was in Massachusetts.

Freshman year in college. I was having a fling with a gal I had met in Charleston the past summer. She went to school at Williams.

We decided that since I got out a few days ahead for Christmas break, I would fly into Albany, make myself useful for a few days with my best friend from HS, who went to Union College in Schenectady, NY, and then we'd all drive on to South Carolina in her car, a VW Type 3 Squareback.

My second day there, big storm. I had driven her car to Union College to stay with Mike at his fraternity (this was the 1970's and Williams dorms were not, uh, integrated.

All goes well until I exit route 7, if I recall a long off ramp. At the bottom of the ramp I am carrying way to much speed as I hit the black ice attempting a right hand turn.

Nice 360 across the intersection, a 360 into the entrance to a restaurant and the final 360 in the parking lot. Over 1000 degrees of spin without hitting a single thing or damaging the car.

The drive to Williams was driven with a bit more care:cool:

scottmandue 01-30-2014 06:45 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by plumb4u2 (Post 7883064)
you're funny speeder, don't you guys in LA have some of the worst traffic on that highway of yours?
What do you think would happen if Mother Nature threw and inch or two of snow or some ice on it??:rolleyes::rolleyes:

Um, we have more than one highway and we don't have the worst traffic... it can be really bad at commuter hours on some highways... but no worse than I have experienced in Orlando or Portland... and then there is Boston.

But I see the point of others that Atlanta isn't exactly prepped for snow/ice so gridlock not too unexpected.

So why don't they (Atlanta) just call a snow day and have everyone stay at home the rare times it does happen?

Baz 01-30-2014 06:48 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by HardDrive (Post 7883370)
Leaders screwed up down there. If you don't have the gear to deal with the situation, fine. But this wasn't a surprise. Why the hell did't all levels of government shut down? Why were the kids at school? Why didn't the governor ask employers to keep workers home. It's not the citizens fault, its the rubes in charge.

Dead on.

But watch the politicians scramble to avoid responsibility. :rolleyes:

Has anyone owned up yet?

Anyone can make a mistake but your character is defined when things go south.

85eurocarrera 01-30-2014 07:00 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by speeder (Post 7883496)
Only a small percentage o people in MN ........

Everyone damn sure has an ice scraper for their windshield, though.

This morning I saw a lady in a mini van using her long handled ice scrapper as sort of a shovel. :rolleyes: Most likely a lack of talent and poor tires, as there was maybe a couple inches of fresh snow over hard pack.

I would of helped, but I was going the other way and traffic was a biotch. She probably would be in the same predicament next time she stopped. :cool:


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