I was thinking of you guys and this thread an hour ago. We're getting hammered by snow that fell on cold dry roads and immediately got worked into ice by passing traffic. The interstate skipped the snow step and went directly to ice - cars all over the place.
Just after it hit the worst stage, I had to head to pick up the kids from a nearby town, and I played with the CDL as I have the mod and dash switch. While driving straight, I engaged CDL, then made a lane change duplicating one I'd just made 50 yards before. The rear felt slightly loose, but did not prepare me for what happened next. The road curves to the right and the truck began to turn in, then understeered, then suddenly went into oversteer when I reacted by easing off the gas (bad move, but much more gently done than a typical driver that might completely drop the gas pedal). I frantically punched the CDL button as the rear sat about 25 degrees out, then slowly came back in as I used half of the oncoming lane. The CDL disengaged about the time the truck had stopped sliding, but it was interesting. About 10 seconds later I found out just how slick it was when I signaled a left turn onto the interstate and nearly did not make it.
Proceeded down the onramp with extreme caution and drove 5 miles back to town to get the kids at 35mph along with traffic at the same speed. Incredibly slick. Lots of cars off the road, etc.
So, a bit of experience from the trenches on what proved to be a very slippery day. I think the CDL is best left off for every day driving on slick stuff.
DougM