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3 Winter Driving Techniques You’re Rarely Told

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Winter driving is as much common-sense as it is practical safety consideration. Remain careful around corners, perhaps do not chance overtaking that vehicle in bad conditions, and plan your routes. These things are obvious, but they don’t quite take the sting out of the worrying winter road. Of course, practised drivers are often accustomed to this season, and so know how to handle it. Additionally, road gritting and safety advice offered by our local government can often help things along. While a 4×4 may have more traction and safety than a tiny hatchback at this time, a careful approach should help you in 99.99% of cases.

However, there are other factors that contribute to our road safety in the winter, perhaps some that we are rarely told. Any competent road driver (as you would be visiting content such as ours), is always interested in whatever they can use to stay safe on the roads and become a more confident driver.

To help you achieve that, we would love to offer the following advice:

Inspect Your Windshields

It’s essential to inspect the windshields and windows of your vehicle each morning. Small chips that come from small debris on less-than-maintained roads can be a point of worry, and do not heal without acting upon them. A small chip can lead to a large crack, which can lead to your vehicle experiencing a fully smashed window that cracks or shatters mid-drive. This is quite clearly not ideal.

Thankfully, it’s possible to overcome this issue with screen & window repair, immediately applied as soon as you notice the problem. For such a cost-effective service, you would be surprised how it can resolve the completely within such a short space of time. This helps you keep your peace of mind.

Refusing Routes

It’s important to consider that while planning a route is important, deadly driving conditions or completely impeded invisibility in a snowstorm can make the process of driving unsafe to the point of resignation. Simply knowing that you can refuse routes, refuse a drive or reprioritize your travel plans through delaying them can help you stay even safer on the roads. We often think that we have to surmount our journey at any cost, but if you know that it’s going to be very difficult getting somewhere, waiting and tailoring your car survival kit instead could be a more promising alternative.

Reporting Issues

Your local authority will only react to immediate issues if they know about them. Sure they may grit the roads or apply their best management of the situation, but it’s hard to do this correctly if they do not know about specific issues. If you notice a string of black ice is causing cars to lose control and recover near where you live, report that to the authorities, or at least your local drivetime radio station. It’s the community of drivers that bond together in winter conditions that could, and do, save lives.

With this advice, we hope your winter driving remains perfectly safe.