Originally Posted By: buster
Of course snow tires help significantly, but Subaru's AWD system outperforms most others, including many part-time systems.
Yep...it's a great system...but it doesn't mean anything if the tires can't grip. One wintry (16+ inches) Thanksgiving Day in Stowe, VT, I saw not one, not two, but THREE Subarus wreck on my road alone.
First one couldn't make a corner (in fairness, it was a very steep and winding road, even by Vermont standards) and sailed off the road into a tree. Totaled, but the driver was OK.
Next one clearly had empathy, and chose that same icy downhill corner to hit the same tree (poor tree).
3rd one wiped out right in front of me...making the left turn from Route 100 to go up the road, he kept a little too much speed and wiped out right into the road sign.
I tried to help him push his car out, but it was completely through the snow bank and was going to need a wrecker. So, I gave him a ride up this icy/snowy hill in my Volvo. It was a 240 wagon with 4 Hakkapelliitta snows on it. As we were climbing past the wreck of the other Subie in Blizzard conditions, the New Jersey Subie driver remarked on my car, saying, "I didn't know these old Volvos were all wheel drive."
"They're not." I replied...keeping my other thoughts on driver skill and snow tires to myself.
What did those wrecked 3 Subies have in common? All season tires and out of state plates.
Flatlander drivers who thought AWD was magic...when what they really needed was traction....