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  • Driving in the Rain.

    Hmmm... From the Ohio Revised Digest of Motor vehicle laws.


    Driving in the rain or wet conditions takes extra care since the roads tend to become slick. As a result the following is required in these conditions

    1) Drive to the conditions of the road. Conditions of the road may not allow you to maintain the speed limit.
    2)Turn on your headlights and windshield wipers. Headlights are required in the state of Ohio when it's raining or snowing.
    3) Using your hands separate your butt cheeks with one hand on each cheek making sure you have a firm grip
    4) insert head.
    Just sliding down the razor blade of life.

  • #2
    People here drive ridiculously slow for rain, but act like kamekazis when the snow and ice flies. Drives me crazy.
    The Rich keep getting richer because they keep doing what it was that made them rich. Ditto the Poor.
    "Hy kan tell dey is schmot qvestions, dey is makink my head hurt."
    Hoc spatio locantur.

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    • #3
      I wish people around here got the freaking hint that just because it's not officially night time or dead dark out does NOT mean squat.....if it's gloomy and doomy, especially with drizzle/sleet/snow, turn your fucking headlights on!

      And the other morning when fog was as thick as pea soup....what are you tards thinking?!

      It must be really that bad, because it's been gloom and doom weather here for so long, every Friday I hear the weatherman say "Folks, please turn your headlights on so that others can see you in this *insert fog/sleet/rain/snow*"
      You really need to see a neurologist. - Wagegoth

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      • #4
        I could fill up several volumes about the idiot drivers here. Who knew that one little snowflake or raindrop...could turn every road in the damn county into a parking lot. No matter that it's snowed here for the past 300 years, people freak out over it. Granted, we do get some heavy snows at times (3 *feet* one year ), but for the most part, our winters are a bit mild.

        Really people, there's no reason to be plodding along at 5mph on a perfectly clear, or even wet road

        Of course we have the other extreme--the people who think that 4WD and SUVs are impervious to ice. These idiots do 90mph under those conditions, and then can't understand why they soon wrap their cars around light poles and/or other vehicles.
        Aerodynamics are for people who can't build engines. --Enzo Ferrari

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        • #5
          Quoth protege View Post
          <Snip> Granted, we do get some heavy snows at times (3 *feet* one year ), but for the most part, our winters are a bit mild.
          <Snip>
          Only 3 feet? Wimp.

          I admit to slowing down a bit during winter driving, but that's a measure of common sense, plus the fact that my road turns into a black-ice skating rink all winter.

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          • #6
            Quoth Salted Grump View Post
            Only 3 feet? Wimp.
            Actually, 3 feet was nothing. It was the taller snowdrifts you have to worry about...especially when you can't look out your windows But, either way, when you live or work in the city, it's difficult. Where do you put that much snow?
            Aerodynamics are for people who can't build engines. --Enzo Ferrari

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            • #7
              Quoth protege View Post
              Of course we have the other extreme--the people who think that 4WD and SUVs are impervious to ice. These idiots do 90mph under those conditions, and then can't understand why they soon wrap their cars around light poles and/or other vehicles.
              One of my favorite quotes from one of my husband's uncles?

              "Four wheel drive does not mean four wheel stop."
              Any day you're looking down at the dirt instead of up at the dirt is a good day.

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              • #8
                You guys should see people drive in the rain in Southern California. It's hilarious! Well, until somebody hits something, which happens a lot. Pretty much, as soon as the teensiest amount of water comes out of the sky, traffic slows to an absolute crawl and everybody forgets how to drive. Luckily it only happens about 5 times a year ^^
                !
                "For truth is always strange; stranger than fiction." -- Lord Byron

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                • #9
                  I hate snow. It's a big part of why I moved out to Vancouver island from Ontario.
                  Here in Victoria we tend to get only an inch or two, and it usually only lasts for about a week. A couple years ago, our entire winter was about 2 hours on a saturday morning in december.

                  This city has no idea how to handle snowfall. If there is even an inch of snow on the ground, it's not uncommon for roads to close, buses to run upwards of 90 minutes late, and a 3+ hour wait to try to get a cab.

                  However, I love the first day it snows; specifically, I love listening to the traffic report on the radio when it first snows. The Greater Victoria Area has a population of about 250,000, and if we get even 1/4 inch, there will be a minimum of 100 serious collisions/hour for the first 5 or 6 hours. Last year, I went into a sports bar I live near and made bets with the staff about car accidents
                  Aliterate : A person who is capable of reading but unwilling to do so.

                  "A man who does not read has no advantage over a man who cannot" - Mark Twain

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                  • #10
                    You think Canada's bad. At least y'all get it pretty consistently every year. Try snow in TEXAS. Heck, try any variation of "frozen water from the sky" and drivers here go nuts.
                    Supporting the idiots charged with protecting your personal information.

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                    • #11
                      Quoth Mnemjian View Post
                      You guys should see people drive in the rain in Southern California. It's hilarious! Well, until somebody hits something, which happens a lot. Pretty much, as soon as the teensiest amount of water comes out of the sky, traffic slows to an absolute crawl and everybody forgets how to drive. Luckily it only happens about 5 times a year ^^
                      My take on it? The first drop hits and it's all, "The sky is falling! The sky is falling" and everybody turns in to Chicken Little, losing what little common sense they started out with.

                      My ex was driving me to the Urgent Care center (bronchitis, not fun) and it was drizzling out. Just enough to get all the oils to the surface of the road. We were stopped at a light and got to watch some moron speed by on the right, completely fail to stop and slam into someone turning in front of him. Flipped the other car around and into a light pole. I'd have stayed to be a witness, but I felt like utter crap, and it was pretty obvious that neither car was going anywhere.

                      ^-.-^
                      Faith is about what you do. It's about aspiring to be better and nobler and kinder than you are. It's about making sacrifices for the good of others. - Dresden

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                      • #12
                        Quoth Andara Bledin View Post
                        My take on it? The first drop hits and it's all, "The sky is falling! The sky is falling" and everybody turns in to Chicken Little, losing what little common sense they started out with.
                        That's pretty accurate I think!

                        My mom calls that oil slick that comes to the surface of the road when it rains "Darwin's lil' helper."
                        !
                        "For truth is always strange; stranger than fiction." -- Lord Byron

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                        • #13
                          Quoth Andara Bledin View Post
                          My take on it? The first drop hits and it's all, "The sky is falling! The sky is falling" and everybody turns in to Chicken Little, losing what little common sense they started out with.

                          ^-.-^
                          That's true, I think that when the first drops hit, the IQ points of many drivers drop several points to where they forget about the oil slick that's now exposed.

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                          • #14
                            I never could understand why people can't seem to drive properly in the rain here. I live in a town where -- at least, Pre-K -- it rained EVERY SINGLE DAY in some part of the city from about May through August every freaking year.
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                            • #15
                              Quoth protege View Post
                              Actually, 3 feet was nothing. It was the taller snowdrifts you have to worry about...especially when you can't look out your windows But, either way, when you live or work in the city, it's difficult. Where do you put that much snow?
                              Dunno about anyone else, but we dump it in Halifax Harbour.

                              Don't arsk me about the psychotic snow plow drivers who think mailboxes are speedbumps and street signs are targets.
                              What colour is the sky in your world and how high of a dosage do you need before it turns back to blue? --Gravekeeper

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