Of course breh. You just have to be from the north. The magical powers endowed by living in the north let you drive uphill on ice sheets.Snow tires work on full sheets of ice ?
Of course breh. You just have to be from the north. The magical powers endowed by living in the north let you drive uphill on ice sheets.Snow tires work on full sheets of ice ?
Okay...I get what your saying ,but it was'nt the snow that caused all of the terrible driving conditions it was the 1/2 of ice underneath the snow also most of the people commenting dont understand Atlanta is pretty hilly and spread out...I drive an SUV with ALL/RWD, and going down a slight hill my shyt was still sliding all over the place. I have driven in snow before, and I dont see how snow tires would've helped in these conditions...
Was never implying it would help much (if at all), as I know from my own experiences from sheets of ice/black ice that all you can do is drive slow and stay in a low gear. I really only asked out of curiosity to it's availability in the South for these rare times.Snow tires work on full sheets of ice ?
Of course breh. You just have to be from the north. The magical powers endowed by living in the north let you drive uphill on ice sheets.
Of course breh. You just have to be from the north. The magical powers endowed by living in the north let you drive uphill on ice sheets.
Of course breh. You just have to be from the north. The magical powers endowed by living in the north let you drive uphill on ice sheets.
Never once said that breh, unless you're referring to previous comments in the thread.Its just us southerners don't know how to drive...
No worries. I only checked the thread now (last few pages), haven't been following the entire thing.CJ, you been respectful but we had to up to here due to the bs many posters come in this thread with. You not being one of them tho but it real eerie answering questions.
Never once said that breh, unless you're referring to previous comments in the thread.
Regardless, stay safe.
I guess it's safe to say most of us will not be going to work tomorrow. State employees are already not going, and since I'm a Federal employee I'm likely in the same boat. Gobner Deal encouraged local business and the private sector to stay off the roads tomorrow also.