Come first snow, mine goes into the aircraft hanger for the winter until the roads are clear and the salt has been washed away next spring. Back to driving the
|
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
09-21-2009, 10:56 AM | #16 (permalink) |
Base Member
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: Vernal, Ut
Posts: 92
Drives: '09 370Z MB 6MT
Rep Power: 16 |
Come first snow, mine goes into the aircraft hanger for the winter until the roads are clear and the salt has been washed away next spring. Back to driving the Honda
|
09-21-2009, 12:02 PM | #18 (permalink) |
Base Member
Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: Connecticut USA
Posts: 243
Drives: '09 370Z PW MT6 S
Rep Power: 16 |
I drive my Z year-round in the Northeast U.S. Having the Limited Slip (sport pkg) and dedicated snow tires makes it possible. A Pathfinder will have better traction, but may not stop or handle any better, especially if using all-season tires. I see a lot of upside-down SUV's when I drive to Vermont ski areas in the winter.
Dedicated snows are the key to true winter happiness with the Z. I would never try to drive the Z in snow without real snow tires. Blizzaks seem to work very well, in the *narrowest* size you can get to fit. Narrow is MUCH better than wide in the snow. So a set of 18" base wheels (see other posts here for examples) are a good idea too, cuz you can get narrower tires on 'em. There are several types of snows you might consider. The performance snows tend to have much better dry road performance, but for true confidence, you should optimize winter/ice traction, so avoid the performance ones if possible. Blizzak non-performance rubber has dual-tread compound using a multicell technology which really works well on ice (but wears like butter on dry pavement). Unfortunately, I haven't found any of these multicell compounds in the sizes we need. Neither the LM-25 nore LM-60's have it. The alternative is micro-siping, where the manufacturer cuts little slices into the tread all over. The theory is that this exposes lots of little edges of rubber which improve adhesion on ice. I had several sets of Michelin Alpin Ice tires which use this technology, and they are clearly better than standard snows for ice/snow-covered roads. They squirm more on dry pavement, however, and I think stopping distances are longer, so like everything else, it is a trade-off. Nokkian and Gislaved have some expensive tires using this technology as well. Remember that the only thing holding you on the road (regardless of AWD/FWD or RWD) is that little patch of rubber on each corner. There have been some other threads on this topic. It boils down to using common sense. The Z has about 4-1/2" of ground clearance, and snow can build up in the wheel-wells. It is useful to remove the wheel spats if you do a lot of driving in loose snow. Around here we get maybe 7-8 true snow days with deep snow. These are good days to wait until the roads are plowed before venturing out. Otherwise, just be careful out there. Hope this helps! HJM |
09-21-2009, 12:23 PM | #19 (permalink) |
A True Z Fanatic
Join Date: May 2009
Location: Toronto, Ontario
Posts: 1,249
Drives: 09 370z Sport 6MT
Rep Power: 18 |
I also have the Z as my only car, and will also be driving in Toronto winter. Yeah, get some used 18 inch rims, and snow tires and go for it. I'm personally gonna go shopping for my winter wheels and tires in a few weeks. Does anyone have advice regarding which brand of snow tire would work best on the z?
|
09-21-2009, 12:51 PM | #20 (permalink) |
Enthusiast Member
Join Date: May 2009
Location: pennsylvania
Posts: 427
Drives: 370z tour,sport,auto
Rep Power: 16 |
A dealer told me this story...... During a moderate snowfall last winter they needed to move a Z from one lot to another across the highway. It took over an hour, and was not a pleasant experience..........
|
09-21-2009, 03:09 PM | #21 (permalink) | |
Base Member
Join Date: Sep 2009
Location: toronto
Posts: 11
Drives: 2002 volvo v70
Rep Power: 16 |
Quote:
I'd also like to add that for the winter right now i drive a 2002 volvo V70 station wagon with all season tires and its just enough to get me through the winter.... how will the Z stack up to it? thanks |
|
09-21-2009, 03:25 PM | #23 (permalink) |
Captin Canuck
|
man alot of you guys abviously don't know how to drive in winter. Winter tires and you are good to go. will it be the best thing in the snow no. but you will be fine. just not aon the big storm days but that is just common sence.
__________________
Originally Posted by SAM@GTM Engine detonation is not normal and it should never never happen, and whoever told that need to do something else for living . Sam |
09-21-2009, 09:43 PM | #26 (permalink) |
Base Member
Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: Toronto, Ontario
Posts: 26
Drives: 10 370Z/RX8/ZX14
Rep Power: 16 |
2 winters ago I drove my new RX-8 in the winter without snows. It was a terrifying winter and I was lucky to live through it. With lesson learned, I picked up snows for this past winter in Toronto...that light little car handled like a snowmobile.
I'll be keeping the RX-8 as my winter car when I pick up the 370Z in spring but will still be getting snows for the 370Z for those days that I do take it out in winter but get surprised with a snow fall. After experiencing the before and after with the RX-8, I'm not the least bit worried about the 370Z with snows. I'm sure you'll be fine. Just watch out for drifts & piles left by plows. |
09-22-2009, 07:31 PM | #28 (permalink) | |
Base Member
Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: Connecticut USA
Posts: 243
Drives: '09 370Z PW MT6 S
Rep Power: 16 |
Quote:
Anyway, narrower winter tires tend to "cut thru" the snow to the pavement whereas wider tires tend to float on top. Running 225/45-18's all around on stock wheels. Would like to go even narrower. Of course these tires suck on dry pavement, but if it is your only means of transport and you MUST go in snow, it will work fine. Just my $0.02 HJM |
|
09-22-2009, 10:04 PM | #29 (permalink) | |
A True Z Fanatic
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: Edmonton
Posts: 1,205
Drives: 2011 Evo-X GSR
Rep Power: 18 |
Quote:
isnt that ironic, i lived in nova scotia and now live in edmonton as well. I'm only driving my Z for the first part of the winter. As of Jan 1st it will be in storage since im doing security for the olympics with the army. To the OP about modding a car. Like this guy said, it depends on the mods. When you sell your car and its modded you wont get even 1/4 what you paid for the aftermarket parts. If you mod the car keep the stock parts and when you are ready to sell...put it back to stock. Thats what i did with my cobalt, kept stock parts and when i was ready to sell, put stock parts back on and then sold the aftermarket parts to my friends and made more money. |
|
09-22-2009, 10:16 PM | #30 (permalink) |
Base Member
Join Date: Sep 2009
Location: Montreal
Posts: 3
Drives: x 350z / Corvette
Rep Power: 16 |
To nice to be driven in the the cold , dirty, slushy, gritty, winter. Not to mention some idiot will probably slide into you the first freezing rain. Well good luck with that have a great safe winter ..
|
Bookmarks |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
How to take care of your 370Z during winter. | Knux | Canada | 20 | 06-28-2010 11:09 AM |
What do you drive in winter? | wanta370 | Nissan 370Z General Discussions | 61 | 08-27-2009 09:45 PM |
wheels for winter | BOBz | Wheels & Tires | 0 | 08-20-2009 12:44 PM |
Winter driving and the Z | matt2112 | Nissan 370Z General Discussions | 14 | 05-07-2009 09:49 PM |
Winter driving? | shumby | Wheels & Tires | 6 | 12-18-2008 09:20 PM |