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- macscrooge
Interestng to read the comment about the 1 Series in the snow. I wonder if part of the problem is the car being so light? My 435d has X-Drive and standard tyres and it's been surprisingly grippy and stable on the recent snow and ice - even on the hills of Sheffield and the higher stretches of the A68.
Honest John's Motoring Agony Column 24-03-2018 Part 1 - Engineer Andy
Interestng to read the comment about the 1 Series in the snow. I wonder if part of the problem is the car being so light? My 435d has X-Drive and standard tyres and it's been surprisingly grippy and stable on the recent snow and ice - even on the hills of Sheffield and the higher stretches of the A68.

Possibly, though I suspect that it has more to do with:

  1. The area that the OP lives is VERY rural/high up and thus roads are not gritted and probably suffer higher levels of snow, very low usage to even start to help clear the roads of snow, made even worse as they are probably not much better than farm tracks (C roads), and;
  2. Their car has very low profile, wide tyres that have less weight for every mm2 of contact on the road than your larger beemer (probably not that much difference in tyre size, but, as you say, far less weight), plus;
  3. The type of tyre each car is shod with. Yours may be also a summer tyre, but some seem to work better than others in wintery conditions, even if all summer tyres are ouclassed by a factor of 10 or more by all-season, and even more so by winter tyres in snow and icy conditions.
Honest John's Motoring Agony Column 24-03-2018 Part 1 - Chris James

Years ago, we used to keep the same tyres on all year around and there were no such thing as Winter tyres, but most of the time traffic still moved around in Winters which could often be as snowy as this one, every year!. Unfortunately these days tyres are designed to save a few MPG in order to keep the tree huggers happy, and this comes seemingly at the expense of all year around grip which motorists used to get.

Even if you swap for Winter tyres, they won't help you much when trying to get down the motorway or up and incline in a town with hundreds of other cars on Summer tyres stuck and blocking the road in front of you.

Edited by Chris James on 30/03/2018 at 00:00

Honest John's Motoring Agony Column 24-03-2018 Part 1 - glidermania

The guy is supposedly an 'advanced driver' not to mention a former saloon car racer but in icy conditions he considered having his foot 'hard down' on the brake pedal the best course of action? Nah, something amiss there.

- Chris C
Land Rover parts - in my day at Land Rover's parts division a car could be declared VOR - Vehicle Off Road and - a line pinch authorised where the necessary parts would be taken off the production line. This might be more of a problem for part panels, etc, but if I was the LR owner in this position I would play merry hell about it...
- Micheal barber
It make interesting reading the advise John gives out I dont understand why you would tell someone to buy a Audi TT with small wheels as they look daft and are off putting when you put the car up for resale as it looks like you could not afford a decent specification car and had to buy the base spec model
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I had 9 year old Mercedes SLK for which the Mercedes dealership supplied a similar vague, enormous estimate to fix an oil leak.
Correct Advice from a small garage was to replace the oil filler cap as the rubber seal may harden allowing oil leakage over the engine. total cost £6.