
Originally Posted by
Karl Lazlo
I will be the weird guy here...
Driving in snow, ice, wet, dry are no different. You are managing grip and the adhesion to the driving surface. Trouble is, all those surfaces, or more appropriately the stuff on the surfaces, changes the amount of grip (and resulting space/time) you have to make the car Go, Turn and Stop.
- Tires: The only part of the car designed to come in contact with the driving surface so have a set of dedicated winter tires optimized for the white stuff.
- Balance: Keep the car in balance. No abrupt control changes. Smooth inputs of the throttle, brake and steering.
- Visibility: No, not just clean windows, but observe and orient your car based on what the mouth-breathers are doing. Have an out - somewhere safe(r) to stick your sheetmetal when others do dumb shit.
- Driver Gear: Besides keeping the car maintained for the winter, be prepared for field-expedient repairs and more importantly, warm, snacks and gear for the driver and passenger(s) if you find your self waiting for road cleaning, extrication or accident.
dude... not the weird guy at all. that is a sane approach to winter driving - you basically wrote everything that i was going to!

Originally Posted by
Karl Lazlo
All Season = No Season. They are a compromise for every season. And, they cause pink eye.
DUDE. i've said the exact same thing so many times. and i've got data on the pink eye bit.

Originally Posted by
3ZHPGUY
I'm originally from Buffalo NY and drove my ZHP 365'days a year in the Cleveland OH area from 12/2006 till 4/2012. I can definitely say it's the best car I've ever driven in the snow. I've also had and have 4x4 trucks and I'd say the ZHP was as good if not better in some instances. I'd also say it's a must to get dedicated snow tires and wheels. I ran the first three years on Pilots the switched over to Blizzaks. The Blizaks where definitely better but, the Pilots never let me down.
My only suggestion are to get to know the DCS system because you need to flip it to the middle mode to get wheel spin when needed. Also make sure your thermostat is good so, you can keep nice and worm inside.
With the 48-52% weight balance the car is an animal in the snow.
guy, agreed on all points. i grew up in VT and have been driving in a snowy climate for over 20 years now. i've had audis and subarus for a lot of those years, and i can also confidently say the ZHP is the best car i've ever driven in the snow as well. why? the balance, and it stops better than anything else. no ABS fuss like any older audi (the brake pedal would start pulsating before your foot even touched it, LOL).
the helical LSD helps mine in regards to accelerating - it just goes, no need to disengage DSC or DTC.
i run michelin x-ice3's, but would like to experience the blizzak WS80's. i've not liked any other blizzak i've tried - too squirmy. but i've heard good things about the WS80.
peter
2004 330i ZHP
2005 330iT ZHP
2010 328iT M Sport
2012 128i M Sport