Cool stuff. These are mandatory in some northern European countries. We could use them in February and March in places like Vermont and New Hampshire. When the temperature warms to 16 degrees or so and the sun shines, mud flies off the wet roads right into the headlights and the windshields. You take your car to the carwash and ten minutes later, you wonder why you did.
yup, I grew up with it in the yoop, where a couple years ago, they had the record high snow fall for the USA, at 360 some inches, I posted about it in snowmobile coverage
Cool stuff. These are mandatory in some northern European countries. We could use them in February and March in places like Vermont and New Hampshire. When the temperature warms to 16 degrees or so and the sun shines, mud flies off the wet roads right into the headlights and the windshields. You take your car to the carwash and ten minutes later, you wonder why you did.
ReplyDeleteyup, I grew up with it in the yoop, where a couple years ago, they had the record high snow fall for the USA, at 360 some inches, I posted about it in snowmobile coverage
DeleteThe real problem is with people that will not wash their taillights.
ReplyDelete