ISU-152
Full Access Member
- Joined
- Aug 12, 2016
- Posts
- 1,061
- Reaction score
- 294
That's for ******....im sure there's a thread on thatLol Everyone know's you can't do sweet jumps with the abs fuse in![]()
Disclaimer: Links on this page pointing to Amazon, eBay and other sites may include affiliate code. If you click them and make a purchase, we may earn a small commission.
That's for ******....im sure there's a thread on thatLol Everyone know's you can't do sweet jumps with the abs fuse in![]()
Haha and im sure its not on point!That's for ******....im sure there's a thread on that

Haha and im sure its not on point!![]()
Awd and 4hi are the same thing, just awd's have no option for 2wd. Auto is when the truck monitor's wheel slippage and engages 4x4 when its needed
ever noticed how the gear selector
Can be easily be pushed into neutral? that is designed for driving on ice. In the event your wheels are locked up on ice, use the neutral bump to cut power to the wheels and lightly pump the breaks.
Ummmm.....I hope you're kidding. For those that are actually new to driving in ice please do the rest of us a favor and never drop the truck into neutral when it's slick out. I'm pretty sure that's not what neutral is for. ;-)
If it's so slick that being in gear causes you to slide you have a lot worse problems. However, you need to be bumping the gas and get the tires moving, then pray that you can actually steer your way through whatever may be happening. Pumping the brakes in neutral isn't going to stop you if it's that slick out, all you've done is take away any control you might have had when the tires stop sliding.

Lol @zambonidriver ....this must be a jokeHaving driven a bunch of cars and trucks with snow tires I can say I'm not impressed with the 22/alenza combo. Driving through the snow storm in Michigan yesterday on the highways was not fun. I'm going to snow tires.
As someone said, tires are the only thing that matters. I've driven rear wheel drive sports cars with snow tires that were better in the snow than my Yukon xl with these tires.
Sent from my SM-N920V using Tapatalk
I've driven rear wheel drive sports cars with snow tires that were better in the snow than my Yukon xl with these tires.
I'll vouch. I had a RWD V8 BMW 5 series around here for several winters. I had a set of snows on it, and with the exception of starting from a stop moving up a hill, it was notably more stable in the snow than any of my AWD/4WD vehicles with all-season tires.Lol @zambonidriver ....this must be a joke
Educate me, what's the difference between switching to AWD vs 4HI? I don't tow anything but why would I use one over the other? I'm coming from a 2002 Denali which is AWD, no option to switch out of that so this is new to me.
Lol @zambonidriver ....this must be a joke[/QUOTE
I agree, complete joke.
Good advice here. One thing that hasn't been said yet - it helps to moderate your speed in the snow by gearing down, versus hitting the brakes.
Obviously if you need to stop, you need to stop. Hit the brake. But if you are just trying to slow down or keep from going faster, using the transmission as a brake is effective. The brakes are friction devices whose ultimate goal is to lock up the wheels, except the vehicle's momentum keeps them from actually doing that up to the point where it doesn't. The transmission on the other hand is not trying to forestall the rotation of the wheels and can be used to safely slow you down with minimal risk that you lose traction. This is doubly true if you are moving downhill.
This is the opposite of what most people do when they feel their car begin to lose traction.1) you can IMMEDIATELY take your foot off the brake if even a light touch locks them up