User Panel
Posted: 3/20/2006 2:46:20 PM EDT
The supposed traction stabilization does a good job preventing a skid. But trying to go in snow and 4" of snow will stop the car dead in it's tracks.
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Haha. Street muscle blows in anything other than a mild sprinkle. Sell it and buy a Ram and lift it.
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Why the Magnum and 300 are rear wheel drive is beyond me. They are such nice looking cars but yet there is only two or 3 of each in town,nobody likes getting stuck in the snow. If these had been FWD or AWD i suspect there would be many more driving around in the north country.
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they do make a AWD magnum |
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What's all that white stuff? |
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Who in their right mind besides the ricer crowd would want a performance fwd? |
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I did not know that,the 300 has my eye,maybe when i move to Texas. |
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Right on. We had two snowfalls last week. Each was more than 4". |
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Because front wheel drive is limited by horsepower/torque and torquesteer. They suck for towing and have to have traction control for even mild accelleration. Not to mention that handling is better in DRY conditions and tire wear is also improved. Also balances out the front/rear weight distribution better. Throw on a set of Blizzacks and you could run thru as much snow as you could drive over without it hitting the undercarriage. Most of the problem is the tires. |
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I take it David you drive a Magnum? They're very good looking.
+1 on what gaspain said-they're AWD also. |
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Hey now, I've got a Subaru Outback Station wagon that handles snow pretty well. So nah. |
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I believe the next generation Monte Carlo SS is suposed to have a 300 HP V-8 driving the front wheels. I had a Dodge Omni that came from the factory with 195/50/15 tires that was awsome in the snow. |
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I am sorry but that is one of the dumbest things I have heard all day. The reason that they are rear wheel drive is because rear wheel drive cars handle better and more predictibly for the average driver. The 300 is one of the hottest selling cars today. They have sold over 10,000 300Cs a month for nearly 2 years. I just dont know why anyone would want a highpowered front wheel drive car. I will agree with you that an AWD package on these cars would make them even more desirable. I dont even like Chrysler, I am a GM guy, but those are some awesome cars that captured the market. James |
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My eye, I put Rotella T Synthetic truck oil in my Grand Am because it thinks it's a snowplow. One problem, traction control is often so good at preventing wheelspin, that snow will actually build up ON the tires. Tires wrapped in snow, on snow............................... |
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Turn in your man card! |
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My SRT4 is fwd with something called a LIMITED SLIP DIFF or LSD, does damn well in the snow if you ask me. Plus i get 30 miles per gallon out of my turbo 4cyl. and with 260hp, who can complain? |
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Giant shrimp Tall midgets Performance FWD RWD cars handle better, and are better balanced than FWD cars. Not to mention the whole tire wear issue. RWD requires a driver with some "feel" in order to get the best performance out of it. |
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Ever heard of the Olds Toronado? The Cadillac El Dorado? The GMC Motorhome? |
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Again, traction control will keep the tires from spinning so well that snow builds up on the tire's tread. LSD gives better traction than an open differential, but can still spin hard enough, even without breaking traction, so that the snow doesn't build up on the tires. In light snow, or rain, etc. the traction control can be a real help in maximizing a car's abvility to use the available traction. Or under heavy acceleration it makes the best use of traction, so HP is translated to speed, not tire smoke. But under some conditions, traction control, is to restrictive, and is uanable to use the vehicle's traction as well as a human can. |
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Yeah, 17 second 1/4 mile off the top of my head. I don't know that anyone ever thought to time an El Dorado........................... FWD is usually cheaper to put together. They are generally better with MPG than similar RWD cars. But performance wise, towing, 1/4 mile, slalom, RWD is better. |
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*Shrug* I have a Charger, and I only got stuck in the snow once..that was trying to go uphill in my driveway, in reverse, without getting up a head of steam first.
Normally when it snows out I am not anywhere NEAR the roads; where I grew up, the idiots came out when it started doing anything more than mist outside. Out here though, no problems, so far. Also, remember, the stock Magnum/Charger tires are shit for snow. They're roughly average on dry, MAYBE par on wet, and sucky on anything other than that. |
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I drove a rear wheel drive most of my life in heavy, deep snow. Most of the problem is getting tires with good snow traction. Wide street /performance tires will not hand snow worth a crap.
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you beat me to it - maybe they got a lot of sand too? |
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I would get a 4WD Magnum with the Hemi in a heartbeat, if I could afford it.
That car is dead sexy. |
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Bingo!! Wide tires and lots o' torque make winter driving a challenge. That said my dad has an AWD 300 (which they don't make currently) and it thinks it's a snow plow. He just doesn't use much of the trottle in the deep stuff. Kent |
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My company is replacing my Impala company car with a Dodge Charger which is RWD, it will be fun I think it looks exactly like the Magnum inside and out except it's a sedan.
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Well considering we had a 72 Olds Toronado with the 455CID engine I can say we did. It weighed a damn ton up front between the lump of iron and the tranny. It did reasonably well in the snow but the torque steer was horrendous if you kicked it hard from the light. The tires were in no way sporty tires tho. They were fine on the highway but they would squeel like a stuck pig under a hard turn. Those cars were absolute BOATS and tho they were great highway cruisers, they were pigs if you tried to run them. Trust me, a 16 year old can smoke the tires pretty good and I also learned that the drive chain is EXPENSIVE if you trash them. The car still sucked for towing tho if their was any tongue weight to speak of. BTW, that car had an early form of ABS, even back then, guess it was an option at the time but not many people ordered it. |
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I saw a Daytona at the auto show that rolled through a few weeks ago. WTF is with the graphics??? I guess they took a scale cue from Pontiac's 'Firebird' graphic circa 1977!
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