I've been driving ice/snow for many years in lots of different vehicles, with and w/out snow tires, studs, modern ice tires, chains, rear wheel drive, front wheel drive, 4W, etc. My two cruisers do well in the mountains in winter as you would expect. However, it wasn't until recently driving around town (hilly Seattle) that I realized how competent the 80 really is. We've had some wicked weather, with more "snow days" for the kids than I can ever remember. Driving the 80 has been totally uneventful. Boring even. So many vehicles spun out, in the ditch, stuck, sliding, wrecked, or parked. The 80 just motors along. Amazing.
Now to my question...when driving on the highway in ice/snowy conditions, does adding the CDL make the truck more stable at higher speed? On my 60, 4H feels like it wants to stay straighter in loose snow on the highway (plowed, but not recently). I wonder if adding the CDL switch would make the 80 feel more stable? It's not a lot of $, so I can add and find out for myself, but wonder if anybody here has some personal experience?
Now to my question...when driving on the highway in ice/snowy conditions, does adding the CDL make the truck more stable at higher speed? On my 60, 4H feels like it wants to stay straighter in loose snow on the highway (plowed, but not recently). I wonder if adding the CDL switch would make the 80 feel more stable? It's not a lot of $, so I can add and find out for myself, but wonder if anybody here has some personal experience?