• GreenBeanMachine@lemmy.world
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    19 hours ago

    So they’re saving time.

    Any negatives?

    I guess it might be annoying to drive behind someone with a roof full of snow falling on your windshield.

    • Mostly_Gristle@lemmy.world
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      17 hours ago

      Any negatives?

      Yeah. You can kill people.

      When that stuff dislodges on the highway it’s not like your car getting hit by a snowball. It’s like having an entire wheelbarrow full of snow hit your car all at once at 50+ mph. Just the weight of it can KO your entire windshield. It’s a super effective way to make someone crash.

      Also, it’s not always just snow. If the snow on your vehicle sat there through a couple of freeze/thaw cycles, there can be a big sheet of ice underneath. If that goes through someone’s windshield it can kill them directly. If you live in a snowy place, pretty much everyone you know has a story about the time they almost died because some asshole was too lazy to clean off the roof of their SUV, or because a huge sheet of ice flew off the top of a semi-trailer.

      • Zoot@reddthat.com
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        16 hours ago

        Trucks are the worst. Theyre supposed to go through a tall pole that’ll literally sweep off all the snow from a trailer. Except that not all trailers are the same and not all drivers are smart. Scariest moment of my life when they’re able to damn near cover an entire 2 lane road with snow.

    • prettybunnys@piefed.social
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      19 hours ago

      Yeah, it’s wildly dangerous to drive with ice and snow on the top of your car as it becomes projectiles and hampers other drivers visibility.

          • GreenBeanMachine@lemmy.world
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            19 hours ago

            So visibility is not an issue, since it is the same as driving behind a truck or a bus. Keep your distance.

            How is soft falling snow comparable to heavy goods? Again, keep your distance, as you would when driving behind a truck, and it won’t fall on your car, but on the road. Also, have winter tires.

            Are you one of those dangerous drivers that tailgates, and drives way too close, doesn’t keep a safe distance and then blames others?

            • guy@piefed.social
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              18 hours ago

              Either you don’t have a drivers license, have never been in traffic or live in a paradise where all drivers are perfect. In any case you have no experience of snow I guess. :)

              You can keep all the distance you like, but the second there’s “space” for another car in front of you, someone will drive past and place themselves just in front of you.

            • prettybunnys@piefed.social
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              19 hours ago

              Wait are you really advocating for the notion that driving with snow on your vehicle is safe and others ought to watch out?

              In a handful of the states where snow is common it is illegal to drive with snow on your car, because of how dangerous it is.

              Did you also struggle with the concept of how wearing a mask helped protect others, which in turn protected you.

              Lmao check lemvotes on this chud

            • MotoAsh@piefed.social
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              18 hours ago

              Your inability to take responsibility for your own moronic decisions is both pathetic and wrong. Sad. You are genuinely trash if you feel such problems are fine for others to just deal with.

              Have fun being trash!

    • Signtist@bookwyr.me
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      9 hours ago

      A few years ago a piece of snow that had hardened from the cold flew off of the top of a guys car and hit my windshield so hard that it spiderwebbed. Snow flying off of a car can also completely blind you for several seconds, since it often comes off all at once like an avalanche.

    • kungen@feddit.nu
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      17 hours ago

      In addition to what the others said, you’re unnecessarily increasing the amount of ice/snow on the road. You also decrease visibility for drivers in the opposite lane depending on the wind direction. It only takes a couple minutes at the most to clean off the majority of snow, unless you’re a lazy tosser.

    • FishFace@piefed.social
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      19 hours ago

      If the snow suddenly obscures the vision of the driver, or a following vehicle, it’s dangerous rather than annoying.

        • Trainguyrom@reddthat.com
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          16 hours ago

          The snow can blow off and affect visibility or even throw projectiles for multiple truck lengths. Plus it won’t just stay in one lane. If an uncleared vehicle passes you in another lane you’re still on danger.

          So drop the “everybody is a terrible driver except for me” arguments

        • Sanctus@anarchist.nexus
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          10 hours ago

          You’re just straight up ignoring all the comments about this being seriously dangerous and causing death. But you’ll reply to one that doesn’t mention it and just be like “so visibility?” Like bruh.

        • FishFace@piefed.social
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          18 hours ago

          The distance that snow can fall off and hit your vehicle can be longer than a safe gap, and in any case, you should generally not be driving in such a way as to rely on other people driving perfectly safely except where it’s impractical not to. Since it’s perfectly practical to fully clear vehicles of snow, that’s what ya gotta do.

          You can see it the same way as pulling out in front of someone. Sure, unless you’re a complete moron, doing so rarely results in a crash, because the other driver will brake to avoid hitting you. But every once in a while that driver will be distracted, or unable to react in time, or be unable to slow down as well as you thought. Or, you can see it as slowing down when passing parked cars in narrow situations: everyone should be behaving sensibly and so you should be able to maintain a high speed, but all it takes is someone to step out from behind a car without looking or an oncoming vehicle to deviate from their lane and you have a disaster.