Unintentional snow trip
Dec. 21st, 2008 10:33 pmI had big plans for my Pacific Northwest roadtrip. It's amusing how few of them came to fruition. I ended up seeing less than half the people I hoped to see, and I instead got a lesson in extreme driving conditions. In any case, I made the most of it. I got to know the hippier-than-thou* town of Olympia thanks to the kind hosting of a friend-of-a-friend, and got to play in the snow in Portland with
simbubba and
zingkotori .
Today I drove my puny little rented front-wheel-drive Chevy Aveo (lowest user satisfaction of any 2008 compact) from Portland to Seattle in a snowstorm... at 30mph. At that speed the drive is about six hours. About 40 miles in, my tire chains broke. I was unable to purchase new ones, and had less than 24 hours to get to Seattle's airport to fly out, so I decided to cruise on the snow-on-ice highway concoction sans chains. I found it useful to understand the boundary conditions of my car's control by simulating sudden brakings, little skids, and fishtails from the center lane when no other cars were around so that I could practice recovering from them for more critical times.
Lots of cars passed me, some driving cars similar to mine at 60mph. There were a good number of accidents, though not as many as I expected. All in all, I saw about 6, mostly near the Seattle/Olympia area. Given that such accidents take a good amount of time to clear and there was a decent amount of traffic, that means that the actual chance of any given driver getting in an accident on that drive was very roughly 1 in 400, which seems surprisingly low given how some people were driving.
*(not hipper-than-thou... hippier. The place made me feel like I was personally responsible for every species that has gone extinct in the last 50 years)
Today I drove my puny little rented front-wheel-drive Chevy Aveo (lowest user satisfaction of any 2008 compact) from Portland to Seattle in a snowstorm... at 30mph. At that speed the drive is about six hours. About 40 miles in, my tire chains broke. I was unable to purchase new ones, and had less than 24 hours to get to Seattle's airport to fly out, so I decided to cruise on the snow-on-ice highway concoction sans chains. I found it useful to understand the boundary conditions of my car's control by simulating sudden brakings, little skids, and fishtails from the center lane when no other cars were around so that I could practice recovering from them for more critical times.
Lots of cars passed me, some driving cars similar to mine at 60mph. There were a good number of accidents, though not as many as I expected. All in all, I saw about 6, mostly near the Seattle/Olympia area. Given that such accidents take a good amount of time to clear and there was a decent amount of traffic, that means that the actual chance of any given driver getting in an accident on that drive was very roughly 1 in 400, which seems surprisingly low given how some people were driving.
*(not hipper-than-thou... hippier. The place made me feel like I was personally responsible for every species that has gone extinct in the last 50 years)
no subject
Date: 2008-12-22 07:14 am (UTC)really? I've always liked that car. Mainly because, through judicious driving, I once got 41 miles per gallon out of an '06.
no subject
Date: 2008-12-22 07:42 am (UTC)My mpg for the 30mph drive to portland was 27. Snow's a drag.
no subject
Date: 2008-12-22 04:23 pm (UTC)