Hmm, I see that Mike’s glasses are under his schnozz in panel #3 (although in none of the other panels). How long has he had the habit of putting them there??
I had a 79 Subaru wagon, I never had to use the 4-wheel drive ever, and I crossed streams and ran on miles of deer trails to supply remote hunting cabins on a set of almost bald tires. Never a complaint in the mud or heavy snow! Before that, I used a VW bus for the same job until it finally died from terminal rust. I don’t know why would anyone pay for and needlessly double the number of fail prone parts in their drivetrain and never use them.
Now people think that if you have four-wheel drive, you can go as fast as you want on icy roads. It doesn’t take long for reality to set in for them- four wheels can spin as easily as two.
4×4 or AWD are the bee’s knees when there’s a foot of fresh snow. Front wheel drive is good, too, as long as you have winter tires and driving skills. Rear wheel drive is the least desirable unless you’re in the mood to do a bunch of drifting.
I’ve had to use my Jeep’s 4WD a few times. Better than my 2WD pickup which I could not get up my driveway which is about 40 degrees. Of course, brakes on both work the same which many don’t realize. I slid down the driveway the other day on about an inch of snow.
I know this strip is a couple decades old. Back then when it was PC to hate SUV’s, it remeinded me of the late 70’s gas hysteria when luxury cars got all the blame. If you owned a Cadillac or Lincoln you were public enemy number one!
I went through the White Mountains area of NH in a snowstorm in my front wheel drive 1976 AMC Pacer (voted #1 ugliest car by Car and Driver magazine). It might have been ugly, but it left most of the other vehicles stuck at the bottom of the hills while we went merrily over the hills without any trouble.
20 yrs ago we had to return a rental to SFO from Reno, and I-70 required chains due to heavy snow the night before. $70 to buy, but we had to make our flight. When we reached the checkpoint, the guy in the SUV in front of us was arguing with the officer, and I could imagine that he said that he is bullet proof… In a moment of perfect retribution, only 1-2 miles later he was deep in the snow-filled ditch, rear-end first. I heard that patrolling wreckers charged $300+ to pull cars out.
snsurone76 1 day ago
Hmm, I see that Mike’s glasses are under his schnozz in panel #3 (although in none of the other panels). How long has he had the habit of putting them there??
snsurone76 1 day ago
What is a “curb” on a soccer field? Anything like a speed bump??
boniface22 1 day ago
It was a kerb which curbed their ability to access the football pitch.
fuzzbucket Premium Member 1 day ago
I used my 4 wheel drive every time the roads got icy. It was much more stable than driving without it.
lalapalooza Premium Member 1 day ago
i am so glad that Mike wound up with this younger woman, she keeps him young!
julie.mason1 Premium Member about 23 hours ago
If you just stayed in the parking lot…
Space_cat about 23 hours ago
I had a 79 Subaru wagon, I never had to use the 4-wheel drive ever, and I crossed streams and ran on miles of deer trails to supply remote hunting cabins on a set of almost bald tires. Never a complaint in the mud or heavy snow! Before that, I used a VW bus for the same job until it finally died from terminal rust. I don’t know why would anyone pay for and needlessly double the number of fail prone parts in their drivetrain and never use them.
Richard S Russell Premium Member about 23 hours ago
When it comes to personal transport, I’m still hoping for teleportation.
Bob Blumenfeld about 23 hours ago
I love Kim’s giggle in the last frame.
SchipLvr about 23 hours ago
Most off-roading experience a SUV sees is going through a car wash.
Blood-Poisoning Vermin about 23 hours ago
SUV = Shopping Utility Vehicle
The Wolf In Your Midst about 22 hours ago
Now people think that if you have four-wheel drive, you can go as fast as you want on icy roads. It doesn’t take long for reality to set in for them- four wheels can spin as easily as two.
grange Premium Member about 22 hours ago
4×4 or AWD are the bee’s knees when there’s a foot of fresh snow. Front wheel drive is good, too, as long as you have winter tires and driving skills. Rear wheel drive is the least desirable unless you’re in the mood to do a bunch of drifting.
NeedaChuckle Premium Member about 22 hours ago
I’ve had to use my Jeep’s 4WD a few times. Better than my 2WD pickup which I could not get up my driveway which is about 40 degrees. Of course, brakes on both work the same which many don’t realize. I slid down the driveway the other day on about an inch of snow.
drivingfuriously Premium Member about 21 hours ago
It’s about the tires. One expert says snow tires on a two wheel drive is better than all seasons on a four wheel drive.
dimndno about 19 hours ago
I know this strip is a couple decades old. Back then when it was PC to hate SUV’s, it remeinded me of the late 70’s gas hysteria when luxury cars got all the blame. If you owned a Cadillac or Lincoln you were public enemy number one!
mindjob about 19 hours ago
Sidewalks are for ordinary drivers
abba3 about 18 hours ago
As I have gotten older, trying to get in and out of a lower to the ground vehicle has become a struggle.
jakko1 about 17 hours ago
I went through the White Mountains area of NH in a snowstorm in my front wheel drive 1976 AMC Pacer (voted #1 ugliest car by Car and Driver magazine). It might have been ugly, but it left most of the other vehicles stuck at the bottom of the hills while we went merrily over the hills without any trouble.
mkvinc Premium Member about 17 hours ago
Volvos were all the thing in “D.C.” in the late 70s. Then people switched to big SUVs. I like my little Kia compact SUV.
lnrokr55 about 16 hours ago
Oooh Volvo, how 80’s yuppie of you! Baby on Board ??? ;-)
willie_mctell about 16 hours ago
We have an all wheel drive car, our third. They’re wonderful on flat dry pavement not to mention snow and mud,
jhedenquist about 11 hours ago
20 yrs ago we had to return a rental to SFO from Reno, and I-70 required chains due to heavy snow the night before. $70 to buy, but we had to make our flight. When we reached the checkpoint, the guy in the SUV in front of us was arguing with the officer, and I could imagine that he said that he is bullet proof… In a moment of perfect retribution, only 1-2 miles later he was deep in the snow-filled ditch, rear-end first. I heard that patrolling wreckers charged $300+ to pull cars out.
eddi-TBH about 10 hours ago
I prefer my trike’s one wheel drive.