DRIVING UNDER SPECIAL CONDITION
* Driving in the rain
Rain reduce visibility and traction as the road becomes wet and slippery. While driving under the rain, your stopping distance may become four or more times as long as on a dry road. Please consider the following:
* Reduce your speed to reduce loss of control
* Drive in track of other vehicles ahead
* Increase your following distance
* Ensure that your headlamp are on so as to be seen by others
* Use your wipers to clean your windscreen and heater to remove mist.
Please drive to stay alive.
* Driving in the rain
Rain reduce visibility and traction as the road becomes wet and slippery. While driving under the rain, your stopping distance may become four or more times as long as on a dry road. Please consider the following:
* Reduce your speed to reduce loss of control
* Drive in track of other vehicles ahead
* Increase your following distance
* Ensure that your headlamp are on so as to be seen by others
* Use your wipers to clean your windscreen and heater to remove mist.
Please drive to stay alive.
On tyre maintenance: How To Inspect Tires For Wear
Monitoring tire safety involves
more than checking air pressure. Routine tire inspections will help you
identify problems with tires and other important systems.
Difficulty: Easy
Time Required: varies
Here's How:
■ Refer to your owner's manual for the manufacturer's recommended tire
pressure. You might also find this information on a sticker in the glove
box or on the driver's door jamb.
■ Use a gauge to check the air pressure in each tire. Add air or deflate as needed to match the manufacturer's recommendation.
■ Look in the grooves between tire tread for raised patches of rubber, 2/32" patches called wear bars. The patches will help you identify a worn out tire. In most states 3/32-inch is the minimum legal tread depth.
■ If tread is worn to a level where wear bars are flush with the tread it indicates that tread depth is 2/32-inch or less. Replace the tires.
■ If your tires do not have wear bars, place a coin into a groove between treads to determine the severity of the wear.
■ Tread should wear evenly, so inspect each tire for unusual tread wear. A rounded edge on the inside and outside edges of tread could indicate under-inflation.
■ The same wear pattern on front tires of front-wheel drive vehicles could indicate a need for more frequent tire rotation.
■ Excessive wear on the center of a tire's tread could indicate over-inflation.
■ Unusual wear that resembles a chopped or stair-step pattern could indicate worn shocks. Stair-step wear on the inside and outside tread of front tires on 4x4 vehicles may be normal.
■ Excessive wear on the inside or the outside of the tread could indicate the need for alignment.
■ Carefully check each tire for punctures, nails, damage, scuffs, and weather cracking. Repair or replace as necessary.
■ Use a gauge to check the air pressure in each tire. Add air or deflate as needed to match the manufacturer's recommendation.
■ Look in the grooves between tire tread for raised patches of rubber, 2/32" patches called wear bars. The patches will help you identify a worn out tire. In most states 3/32-inch is the minimum legal tread depth.
■ If tread is worn to a level where wear bars are flush with the tread it indicates that tread depth is 2/32-inch or less. Replace the tires.
■ If your tires do not have wear bars, place a coin into a groove between treads to determine the severity of the wear.
■ Tread should wear evenly, so inspect each tire for unusual tread wear. A rounded edge on the inside and outside edges of tread could indicate under-inflation.
■ The same wear pattern on front tires of front-wheel drive vehicles could indicate a need for more frequent tire rotation.
■ Excessive wear on the center of a tire's tread could indicate over-inflation.
■ Unusual wear that resembles a chopped or stair-step pattern could indicate worn shocks. Stair-step wear on the inside and outside tread of front tires on 4x4 vehicles may be normal.
■ Excessive wear on the inside or the outside of the tread could indicate the need for alignment.
■ Carefully check each tire for punctures, nails, damage, scuffs, and weather cracking. Repair or replace as necessary.
Tips:
Pressure stats printed on sidewalls indicate the maximum amount of air
pressure tires should be inflated with, they are not recommended
pressures.Check your owner's manual or ask your local tire dealer for
tire rotation recommendations.
What You Need:
Tire Pressure Gauge
A coin
A coin
Copied
ReplyDeleteNice
Delete-D great anonymous now as Vivian Reginalds
Nice. But this year's raining season is a funny one. Sun go hammer person for 2 weeks straight, then rain will fall for a day, and then the hotness continues.
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Okay ooo...we go comply
ReplyDeleteNoted!
ReplyDeleteOK
ReplyDeleteOk,una thank you
ReplyDeleteLIB ADDICT#just passing#
It is not you are bringing up safety rules. I am very sorry for you. You are on your own.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the tips
ReplyDeleteThanks FRSC for the safety tips
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Alright.. Noted!!!
ReplyDeleteDats good! Thanks for the info, very informative. Linda take note!
ReplyDeleteOkies...
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i love this new development for safety of lives and properity up
ReplyDeletesaftey of lives is very important to note linda take note too
ReplyDeleteCool
ReplyDeleteNoted
ReplyDeleteU mean say we fit DE use tokunbo tyres? Thk God... *sigh of relief *
ReplyDeleteThanks for all these valuable tips. But I think you missed gps tracking. By gps vehicle tracking we can increase road safety.
ReplyDelete