Very close call. 100- Series likely saved several lives.

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Mar 7, 2012
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Location
Eugene, OR
I was driving back from breakfast in Portland to a hotel before my sister and I were preparing to fly out to HI. I use a large following distance due to the armor and gear I carry, since I am still running stock brakes. traffic was average, moving well. I glanced at my GPS to see if this was my exit, and my sister yelled "BRAKES!". I looked up to find the car in front of me at a full stop and about 25 yards and closing. I hit the brakes hard, but knew there was no way the 100 was going to stop anywhere near in time. I took evasive maneuvers and swerved onto the paved shoulder toward the drop off into the forest. My sister screamed again, certain that we were going to go off the shoulder and roll into the forest at 30+ MPH. I stayed on the brakes, but didn't engage the ABS. I corrected, got a tire chirp, but the new studded Duratracs (less than 500 miles) held and we whipped back toward traffic. Body rolled and I worried about fish tailing with the over correction, but she straightened right out and settled down. We drove safely to our exit just a few hundred yards ahead.

I attribute not having a severe accident to several things. The half second I gained from having my passenger get my attention back on the road, the heavy duty OME suspension (less than 10k miles on it), the new shoes and the FULL time 4WD. Honestly, I think it was the 4WD that kept me from losing control in a fish tail, as I was very conscious, in the moment, that I likely over-corrected in both directions. But the 100 settled right back down and apart from that tire chirp, that is all I got.

PS- If you were directly in front of me that day, send me the dry cleaning bill for your pants. I can't imagine how scary it would be see a lifted 100 with full ARB bumper barreling down on you when you are at a full stop. Had I hit that car straight on, the occupants would have been severely injured or killed.

Well maintained rigs and quick reflexes save lives! I also need to get a dash top mounted GPS!
 
Wow!

Glad your able to fight another day.

I actually forget to attribute how well the AWD and size can help.

I would love to see the "Moose" drill in a reg 100, then one with the front drivetrain disabled and RWD only.

That would be an eye opener!


Regardless, glad your ok!

Does your passenger want a hundy now?
 
Seriously though, hats off to your quick response and driving skills. You saved your hundy and likely multiple lives. If only more people had skills like this I believe the road would be a lot safer.
 
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Feels good to come out of that maneuver with no damage, except some mild ptsd. I wonder how many on mud have successfully executed this- twice in 13 years of ownership for me. Had it been a sedan, going off pavement to avoid crash wouldn't be a safe option.
Reminds us all to stay focused! Well done.
 
wow dude, where abouts was this? I hate the two lane bit of I-5 between portland and eugene!

It was actually between Vancouver and Portland. Traffic just came to a full stop, not sure why. Honestly, I really credit the 4wd for the save. - Yes, I initiated the maneuver, but even in the moment, I could feel that I over-compensated (likely due to our Breakfast waitress, refilling my coffee too many times. :D ) I was very concerned about losing control due to body roll and counter-steer. I think stock suspension with 250k on it (my rig has 275k now) would have led to disaster. The stout springs on the OME HD lift, really controlled the roll. Was amazed that I didn't either plow back into traffic or roll it into the ditch.

Thanks for the kind words, just glad no one, and nothing was damaged.

PS- I'm a man, and don't have a "hubby". :)
 
PS- I'm a man, and don't have a "hubby". :)
I fixed it :)

Oh the drawbacks of posting off my iPad, the dang autocorrect always messes with me.
 
Hope you had OEM brake shoes. These make a BIG difference in breaking.

Once I was doing 75 MPH on I-20 and then a 4 cylidner car pulled into my lane to pass a semi. He was so slow and so close I came within 10 feet or so. This creature checks the brakes and came almost to a full stop. I had no choice I slammed on the brakes at 75 MPH. To my surprise, the runner came to a stop without screeching tires or wondering all around the road. Also noticed the shift lever has moved into neutral, guess this is a safety measure!
 
I assume they are OEM. The Original owner did all maintenance at dealership. Brakes have always felt good.
 
I would have thought VSC would be ideal for a situation like this. Any idea if not having it had any effect on the outcome?
Either way, @Spanktron9 it seems your maneuvering skills were on point. :steer::clap:
 
I would have thought VSC would be ideal for a situation like this. Any idea if not having it had any effect on the outcome?
Either way, @Spanktron9 it seems your maneuvering skills were on point. :steer::clap:

I don't think the 99's have VSC.

Great driving, OP.
 
Does your GPS not "talk" to you for directions, or do you have that turned off? Glad all is Ok with you. Be safe out there!
 
I don't think the 99's have VSC.

I'm aware ;). My question was more in terms of trying to find out if "not" having VSC had any effect on the successful maneuver. I believe many opt to go '00+ in order to have that added safety feature, but was just wondering if in this case if it would have helped or not.

Trying to justify my desire for a 99 to have rear lockers, even though it has a few less safety features. Didn't have to worry about that when I had my 80 series.
 
Scary. Nice work.

Speculation:
Do you think all wheel drive really had anything to do with it? If you're on the brakes then the driveline is irrelevant.
I'd guess that driver skill, suspension, and tires were the relevant components here.
 
Feels good to come out of that maneuver with no damage, except some mild ptsd. I wonder how many on mud have successfully executed this- twice in 13 years of ownership for me. Had it been a sedan, going off pavement to avoid crash wouldn't be a safe option.
Reminds us all to stay focused! Well done.

At a much slower speed than Highway, I was in the right lane, with a city bus well ahead and making frequent stops. This is on a city road , doing 45mph. I wait for the lane to clear, get into center lane so I don't have to stop behind the bus, which is still not at the stop, but already slowing down. After already being in the center lane, guy in the left lane decides he wanted to come to center, and apparently didn't look proceeded to come into my lane, and the hundy is so big, there is no way I was completely blind to him. Oh, and when he comes into the lane in a very aggressive fashion as well, apparently unhappy with the speed of the driver in front of him.

I immediately slam the brakes and move to the right lane (no one there, except for the now almost stopped bus), once the moron clears, I swerve back to center lane. There was no way I was going to be able to stop behind the bus without hitting it, and braking alone would not have kept me from hitting the moron, which I am convinced would have caused him to spin or roll if I hit him, as I would have hit him between the passenger door and front tire.

Oh, and all the passengers in my car, my wife, daughters, teenage daughters, they are yelling at me, because they were oblivious to what was going on, and thought I screwed up. My daughter's friend was paying attention though behind me and saw the whole thing. Truck definitely helped, but really the big thing that saved us is "There's this new thing called Situational Awareness LANA"
 
Does your GPS not "talk" to you for directions, or do you have that turned off? Glad all is Ok with you. Be safe out there!

I keep it turned off, otherwise it is too distracting. I GPS everywhere and just glance occasionally at upcoming turns. I need to mount it on top of the dash to keep the road in view. I had it mounted on a vent.
 
Scary. Nice work.

Speculation:
Do you think all wheel drive really had anything to do with it? If you're on the brakes then the driveline is irrelevant.
I'd guess that driver skill, suspension, and tires were the relevant components here.

Hmm. You're probably right. Now I have to think, if I let off the brakes during the counter-steer. Unlikely, so yeah, probably tires, suspension and someone looking out for me. :)
 

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