loudog3114
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- James
- Joined
- Dec 9, 2021
- Threads
- 11
- Messages
- 124
- Reaction score
- 122
- Location
- Boston, MA
- Vehicles
- Tesla P100D, 98 TJ, Silverado SS, 18 Camaro 2SS
- Occupation
- IT
- Thread starter
- #61
A) most of the roads are not in the mountains of Colorado, B) I have, actually, and I wouldn't touch 70mph on the vail pass with snow on the ground, and C) I'd love to know what I don't know about. But I do know you don't use about 95% of available grip in either direction in typical highway travel, I don't care what state you drive in. Yes, obviously that 5% of the time you drive up and down the mountains west of Denver in a snow storm you need awd (even though traffic goes about 30), and in a good implementation that would be the case. Doesn't mean the truck should stay less efficient for those minority scenarios.You don't know as much as you think you do, I promise. And you certainly haven't spent much time driving the Colorado mountain highways in winter.
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