Used the lunch break to install the rear seat cover and dashboard cover from Tougher. The fronts were done a few months and many thousands of miles ago.
It is hard for me to grasp the drive you have just undertaken as I have not driven in snow of that depth. I have experienced ice which is not for the faint hearted...I drove on a wet dirt road yesterday between Woodford and Glasshouse Mountains with the centre diff locked, corrogations, soft soil and water but the Grenadier soaked it all up in her stride, in the snow are you locking centre diff?... It is amazing how black and white your world looks today, safe travelsView attachment 7878144View attachment 7878145
It's been a bit of a snow day in my part of the UK, so getting to work involved avoiding lots of motorists in lesser vehicles as they drove badly all over the place. A Gren on KO2s does well on wet snow.
Wet snow is not really challenging provided the vehicle is relatively heavy. The tyres just just force their way through the snow to the road.It is hard for me to grasp the drive you have just undertaken as I have not driven in snow of that depth. I have experienced ice which is not for the faint hearted...I drove on a wet dirt road yesterday between Woodford and Glasshouse Mountains with the centre diff locked, corrogations, soft soil and water but the Grenadier soaked it all up in her stride, in the snow are you locking centre diff?... It is amazing how black and white your world looks today, safe travels
There may be an interesting exception for the center diff lock in a vehicle with a considerable difference in weight on the front and rear axle.you don't want to use diff locks on snow generally.
New rotors in addition to pads seems early to me unless you’ve covered significant distance in your truck.Went in for service due to getting the “Brake Wear” indicator. I had 4mm left on my front brakes so was getting the warning. The odd thing was that my gas mileage dropped significantly. When the indicator popped up. I filled up with about 21 gallons and had roughly 275 ish miles on the tank…ON my way to the dealership Ihad roughly 90 miles on the tank and was just above 1/2 a tank on the gauge. Reached the dealership with around 120+ miles and was a tad below 1/2 a tank.
Now I have new pads and rotors on the front, a software update that apparently helps with the fuel level sensor issue, and another wash…Had a bit over 34k miles. Will be having my 3rd service most likely before the end of the year.
I was getting the random clicks as well even with the speed warning disabled. Turns out the lane keep needs to be turned off too so that is also part of my start up check list. I now have zero clicks or sounds under any circumstance. The sequence is start engine, set HVAC to auto, choose desired temp, turn off auto start/stop, turn off speed warning, turn off lane keep warning. It doesn't take that much time, but I would prefer to not have a pre flight checklist.Edit: I do have a weird question. Sometime I still get a click/clunk from the speed limit warning even after i disable it. But it’s just a single random click/clunk and no warning lights. Anyone else get that from time to time?
Thank you!!! This is the first I hear of this!!! Probably missed it on another thread. Thought I was going “cuckoo for Cocoa Puffs”!!I was getting the random clicks as well even with the speed warning disabled. Turns out the lane keep needs to be turned off too so that is also part of my start up check list. I now have zero clicks or sounds under any circumstance. The sequence is start engine, set HVAC to auto, choose desired temp, turn off auto start/stop, turn off speed warning, turn off lane keep warning. It doesn't take that much time, but I would prefer to not have a pre flight checklist.
Luckily we don't have all that stupid crap in our Grenadiers in Australia but I still have to turn off the auto stop start rubbish.Thank you!!! This is the first I hear of this!!! Probably missed it on another thread. Thought I was going “cuckoo for Cocoa Puffs”!!
We all have a dang sequence to our start ups!!!!
“They are going to be sued anyway for something, that's just how it works”
I always forget to turn it off until I’m on my way and it starts clicking at me. Then I’m turning it off while driving which is going to cause me to crash. On the whole the over speed warning is far more dangerous than actually going over the speed limit. It is a huge distraction equally as bad a playing on your cell phone while driving. I would love to have a conversation with the idiot who as forced this on us.It's kind of funny... They won't make the vehicle self center which arguably is a far higher cognitive load than drING 2MPH over the speed limit , and consequently they think that 2mph over warning is more important than making the car self center. Super strange priorities and comes off as a bit strange.
Is that a technical office or just a silly decision? They are going to be sued anyway for something, that's just how it works
Nice writing and so true.you don't want to use diff locks on snow generally. The key skill to have when driving in snow is to avoid varying the speed of the tires relative to the surface you are driving on. You want to be very gentle with acceleration so you don't break traction and even more gentle with braking. A mental image is to imagine that you place an egg between your foot and the brake/gas pedal. don't push so hard or with so much momentum that you break the egg.
I grew up in the snow in northern scandinavia and that is where i learned to drive in snow. we used studded tires in the winter but that is mostly useful for ice. for snow just being a really smooth driver is the trick to being a safe driver. I've never used chains for anything, if i'm super stuck maybe that is useful.
I'm heading into the snow in the sierras this weekend. Should be a bit of snow up on altitude if i'm lucky.