Proper chains are illegal in this country for road use.My car has winter tyres fitted and when substantial snow is forecast I put the chains in the boot just in case.
Proper chains are illegal in this country for road use.My car has winter tyres fitted and when substantial snow is forecast I put the chains in the boot just in case.
I learnt to drive in snow and ice. Then did a lot of driving in mud.
I don't have a problem with driving in varying conditions, nor the locations and number of driven wheels on a vehicle.
The main reason is that I take the time to learn about the abilities of each vehicle I have driven, in the conditions I am to drive them in, and then to apply that learning and knowledge appropriately.
However, some people seem unable to do that with any level of effectiveness.
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Proper chains are illegal in this country for road use.
I'd like to see a minimum number of hours of training before a test can be taken, but people wouldn't like it because it would seem to cost more. Furthermore, I'd like to see those hours spread over a certain timescale like a year. Apart from anything else, if you were learning in the summer, you might actually never have a lesson in decent rain, let alone snow!
It took me three days, including tests to get my full motorbike license. However, I had been riding for 4 months on a CBT and L plates on my own bike which I then used for my test.
Had I needed to do my CBT as well, it would have taken a week.
This is where it comes down to the training school to assess and correct rider behaviour so that they do ride safely, too many riders get their CBT without taking away any road knowledge and are hesitant when riding, in a bad way.
Ironically, friends who've done the intensive course have either not crashed or had fewer or minor incidents than friends who spread out their tuition over a longer period of time.
What relevance has your post to driving in snow?
It has the same relevance that Arch's post has, as a side debate to driving in adverse weather conditions, Arch was commenting that she felt it a bad thing that it's possible to get a driving licence within a few weeks, I was adding to her point about being allowed to drive without experience in bad weather, the fact that many motorbike licenses are acquired in a single week, often in the summer where the weather is normally very good, and possibly not even a single drop of rain. As such you get many people unable to adapt their riding or driving style to bad weather conditions with obvious results and that I agree, perhaps requiring to show competence in poor conditions is required as part of the test or with motorbikes, to lift a power restriction placed on your license.
having said that, many motorbike tests get cancelled due to heavy rain.
.Light weights.