OT: Snow Removal From Your Car Before Driving | Page 6 | The Boneyard
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OT: Snow Removal From Your Car Before Driving

Point Center supports douchy behavior not cleaning your car of snow. If the shoe fits! Regardless if you posted #8 times you park in a garage. Anyway, go UConn! See everyone in Hartford Saturday on a brutally cold day.

It snowed about 3-4 inches last night. I didn't have any snow on my car. I park in a garage (#9).

Fun fact: Even parking in the garage, I would be about 20x more dangerous to drivers around me if I was tailgating on the slick and icy roads this morning than if I had all 3 inches of snow on the roof of my car for 10 minutes until it melted or blew off.
 
It snowed about 3-4 inches last night. I didn't have any snow on my car. I park in a garage (#9).

Fun fact: Even parking in the garage, I would be about 20x more dangerous to drivers around me if I was tailgating on the slick and icy roads this morning than if I had all 3 inches of snow on the roof of my car for 10 minutes until it melted or blew off.

I am enjoying every bit of every one of your posts in this thread. Just clean the snow off your car.
 
Not sure if this helps anyone but I always

1. Park my car in the back of the driveway (close to the street). This is for emergencies. I can walk through snow to get my car but my car can't cut through snow to get to the street. Basically I don't have shovel to leave the house if I have an emergency.

2. Always move my car to the street and then clean the snow off of it in the street. I hate shoveling twice.

3. Always keep cash around in case some teens come by and you feel lazy and haven't started shoveling yet.

*no garage
 
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Did I mention that I park in a garage? (#10)

"Even parking in the garage, I would be about 20x more dangerous to drivers around me"

Clean the snow off your car, and don't tailgate whoever is in front of you.

If a sheet of ice/snow flies off your car and causes damage to cars behind you, "they were driving too close" will never be an acceptable defense.
 
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I have a garage, but I actually pile snow on my car before driving it.

Increases the R value of the roof and keeps the car warmer.
That was you?
IMG_6180.webp
 
I am enjoying every bit of every one of your posts in this thread. Just clean the snow off your car.
Anyone else hearing an unwritten "ass hat" at the end of that last sentence?
 
Your math checks out. Did you use AI, or are you just smart?


Reminds me of:

"Teacher, am I ever going to use any of this math?"

"No, but some of the smart kids might."
I’ll give you one guess. I can tell you that I am not smart as someone who insists this thread is about tailgating and that we’re all reckless drivers.
 
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Doesn’t the Virgin Islands have regular cable where you’d get Fox, FS1, ESPN, etc.? The hotels do so I’d imagine the residents can also. Anyway in today’s world there are streaming services so not an issue getting UConn games.
Satellite I think not cable. Problem becomes the spread of streamers needed but hopefully a Sling blue account will help
 
All moot on Sunday as a foot or more snow means no driving anyway. Hard enough finding the car never mind trying to drive it.
 
I’ll give you one guess. I can tell you that I am not smart as someone who insists this thread is about tailgating and that we’re all reckless drivers.

This thread quickly became a shaming thread. If you are going to shame, it should be about something that is seriously dangerous, is completely within each of our control, and most of this board clearly does.

I know plenty of actuaries. Should I find out which of an inch or two of snow on the car or tailgating results in more claims?
 
Where I live, Jessica’s law states you must remove all snow before driving. Snow still on the car becomes a projectile that can cause serious harm. I’ve seen sheets of ice fly off the back of pickups and almost total cars
That's actually the law in CT, too. But it's rarely enforced until it causes an accident. Connecticut law (CGS § 14-252a)
requires drivers to clear all snow and ice from their vehicle's hood, roof, and trunk so it doesn't become a hazard, or risk a $75 fine.; if dislodged snow causes injury or property damage, fines increase to $200-$1,000 ... higher for commercial vehicles.
 
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This thread quickly became a shaming thread. If you are going to shame, it should be about something that is seriously dangerous, is completely within each of our control, and most of this board clearly does.

I know plenty of actuaries. Should I find out which of an inch or two of snow on the car or tailgating results in more claims?
It's hilarious that you think everyone who cleans off snow from their car also tailgates
 
It's hilarious that you think everyone who cleans off snow from their car also tailgates
Well, he's probably discussed this with the "plenty of actuaries" he knows and they've told him there's a high degree of correlation.
 
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Point Center supports douchy behavior not cleaning your car of snow. If the shoe fits! Regardless if you posted #8 times you park in a garage. Anyway, go UConn! See everyone in Hartford Saturday on a brutally cold day.
But will you be parking in a garage on Saturday?
 
Nelson quit being lazy and take the snow off your car. Whether you park in a garage or not take the damn snow off your car.
 

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