Edit: Wonderful information in this thread. Good work comrades! I'm proud of y'all :Care-Comrade:

Mods delete this if there's already a tip thread, but now is the time to share any information we can that can help people. I see good advice in the related threads, but I don't see one that's just dedicated to tips so I'm making this post.

Onto the tips:

If you have a tent, pitch it inside your house. It is a considerably smaller space to keep warm, and your ambient body heat will warm it.

If you don't have a tent, get bed sheets and hang them to create a "smaller room" within a room.

Sleep together in the same room with your other household members and pets. Your body heat will help warm the space.

Put your sleeping bag inside your bed and sleep inside that under blankets. Down comforters are great. Wool is great at insulating if you can deal with the itch and you aren't allergic.

Socks: Put on two pairs of socks, a warm insulating one on the inside and a thinner one on the outside. Put on your shoes (boots preferably) and pull the outer layer down over the top of your shoe. Snow will no longer fall inside your shoe. The only thing worse than cold feet is cold wet feet.

Fold newspaper into inch wide strips and pack it into anywhere cold air can seep in, like the bottom of the door. 3-4 large sheets can be taped over windows to provide extra insulation.

Layers layers layers. If you need to do any work outside peel off layers as your labor begins to warm you up. You do not want to sweat. You do not want to be wet. You can always put the layers back on.

Throw tomorrow's clothes in your bed with you to warm them up so you don't have to put on cold clothes in the morning.

Use every hour of daylight you have to prepare for the following dark. :af-heart:

  • Multihedra [he/him]
    ·
    4 years ago

    Here's the problem they try and solve: if you slam on the brakes and the wheels completely lock, this is OK on asphalt, which provides enough friction to slow you down reasonably quickly. But it's not OK on ice; ice provides basically no friction, so you end up with locked wheels just sliding along the ice, not slowing you down at all. (It's not ideal on asphalt either, but you'll stop).

    So, my understanding is that ABS ("anti-lock brake system") tries to not let the brakes engage so hard that they completely stop wheel motion. I think older/crappier ABS just emulate "pumping" the brakes (engaging and disengaging them) but I'm not sure. My 2006 with ABS makes a repeated thudding noise when I slam on the brakes, which I take to be the ABS pumping the brakes.

    • Creakybulks [he/him]
      ·
      edit-2
      4 years ago

      Can you not feel the brake pedal move up and down rapidly in your car when it engages? My cars with abs have always done that.

      • Multihedra [he/him]
        ·
        4 years ago

        Huh, I guess “thudding noise” is also accompanied by/more accurately a “thudding feeling”, but I really don’t notice the pedal actually moving so much as having a vibration transmitted through it.

        I’ll have to test it out though, now I’m curious

        • Creakybulks [he/him]
          ·
          4 years ago

          well don't test it out too much so you go flying into a ditch Conway.

          But yeah I'm pretty sure an ABS system literally flushes fluid into the brake system and the pedal rises and lowers because of it.