
If you  need to  reduce  your  speed  as you  approach  a 
curve, do  it  before you enter  the curve, while your front 
wheels  are straight ahead. 
Try  to  adjust your  speed 
so you  can “drive” through  the 
curve.  Maintain  a reasonable, steady speed.  Wait to 
accelerate until  you are out of the  curve,  and  then 
accelerate gently into the straightaway. 
Steering  in Emergencies 
There  are times  when  steering  can be more  effective 
than  braking. For example,  you  come over a hill and  find 
a  truck  stopped  in your lane,  or a car  suddenly  pulls out 
from  nowhere,  or a child darts  out from  between  parked 
cars  and stops right  in front  of  you.  You  can avoid these 
problems  by  braking 
- if you  can stop in time. But 
sometimes  you  can’t; there isn’t  room. That’s the time 
for  evasive action 
- steering  around the problem. 
Your  vehicle  can perform very well  in emergencies  like 
these.  First  apply your brakes. 
See  Braking  on page 
4-6. It is better to  remove as much 
speed  as you  can  from  a possible collision.  Then 
steer  around  the  problem,  to the  left  or right  depending 
on  the  space available.  An  emergency 
like this requires  close  attention  and  a 
quick  decision. 
If you  are  holding the steering  wheel  at 
the  recommended 
9 and 3 o’clock  positions,  you 
can  turn  it  a full 
180 degrees  very  quickly  without 
removing  either hand.  But  you  have  to act  fast,  steer 
quickly, and just  as quickly  straighten  the  wheel 
once  you  have  avoided the  object. 
The  fact that  such  emergency  situations are always 
possible is  a  good reason to practice  defensive  driving 
at  all  times and  wear  safety  belts properly. 
4-1 4  

Do not  get too close to the vehicle  you want  to 
pass  while  you’re  awaiting  an opportunity. 
For  one  thing, following too closely  reduces your 
area  of vision, especially 
if you’re following  a larger 
vehicle.  Also,  you  won’t  have  adequate  space 
if 
the vehicle  ahead  suddenly  slows or  stops. 
Keep  back  a  reasonable distance. 
When it looks like  a  chance to pass  is coming  up, 
start  to accelerate but  stay in  the  right lane and don’t 
get too close.  Time  your  move 
so you will be 
increasing  speed as the  time  comes  to move  into the 
other lane. 
If the  way  is clear to pass,  you will have  a 
“running start” that  more than makes  up  for the 
distance  you  would  lose by dropping back.  And 
if 
something  happens to cause  you  to cancel your 
pass,  you  need  only slow  down  and  drop back  again 
and wait  for another opportunity. 
If other vehicles  are lined  up to pass  a  slow vehicle, 
wait  your  turn.  But take care that  someone isn’t trying 
to  pass  you  as you  pull out to pass  the slow vehicle. 
Remember  to glance over  your shoulder and  check 
the  blind  spot. 
Check  your  mirrors, glance over your shoulder, and 
start your left lane  change signal before  moving  out 
of  the  right lane  to pass.  When  you  are far enough 
ahead  of the passed vehicle to  see its front in your  inside mirror, activate 
your right lane  change signal 
and  move  back  into the right  lane.  (Remember  that 
your  right outside  mirror 
is convex.  The  vehicle  you 
just  passed  may  seem  to be  farther  away  from  you 
than it really  is.) 
Try not to  pass  more than one  vehicle  at  a time on 
two-lane roads.  Reconsider before passing  the  next 
vehicle. 
Don’t overtake  a  slowly  moving  vehicle  too  rapidly. 
Even  though  the brake  lamps  are not  flashing,  it may 
be  slowing  down or starting to  turn. 
If  you’re being passed,  make  it easy  for  the  following 
driver  to get  ahead  of  you.  Perhaps  you  can  ease 
a 
little to the right. 
Loss of Control 
Let’s review  what driving  experts  say  about  what  happens 
when  the three control  systems  (brakes,  steering  and 
acceleration)  don’t  have  enough  friction where  the  tires 
meet  the road  to do  what  the driver  has  asked. 
In  any  emergency,  don’t  give  up.  Keep  trying to steer 
and  constantly  seek  an  escape  route  or  area  of 
less danger. 
4-1 6  

Skidding 
In a skid,  a  driver  can  lose control of the vehicle. 
Defensive  drivers avoid  most skids  by taking reasonable 
care  suited  to existing conditions, and by not “overdriving” 
those  conditions.  But  skids  are always  possible. 
The  three types  of skids correspond to your vehicle’s 
three  control  systems.  In  the braking skid,  your  wheels 
aren’t  rolling.  In the  steering or cornering  skid, too much 
speed  or  steering in a curve  causes  tires to slip  and  lose 
cornering  force.  And 
in the  acceleration skid, too  much 
throttle  causes  the driving  wheels to spin. 
A  cornering skid is  best  handled by easing your foot 
off 
the  accelerator  pedal. 
If  you  do  not  have  the Enhanced  Traction System  or  the 
Traction  Control  System,  or 
if the system  is off, then 
an  acceleration skid is also best handled by easing your 
foot 
off the  accelerator pedal. 
If your  vehicle  starts  to slide, ease your foot off the 
accelerator  pedal and quickly  steer the way  you  want 
the  vehicle  to go. 
If you  start steering quickly  enough, 
your  vehicle  may  straighten out.  Always  be  ready 
for  a second  skid 
if it occurs.  Of 
course, traction is  reduced  when water, snow, 
ice,  gravel  or other material  is on  the  road. For safety, 
you’ll  want to slow  down  and adjust your driving  to these 
conditions.  It is important  to slow  down  on  slippery 
surfaces  because stopping distance will  be longer and 
vehicle control  more  limited. 
While driving  on 
a surface with  reduced  traction, 
try your best  to avoid  sudden  steering, acceleration or 
braking (including engine braking by shifting to  a 
lower gear).  Any  sudden  changes  could cause  the tires 
to  slide.  You  may  not realize the surface  is slippery 
until your vehicle is  skidding. Learn to  recognize warning 
clues 
- such  as enough  water, ice  or packed  snow 
on  the  road  to make  a  “mirrored surface” 
- and  slow 
down  when  you  have  any  doubt. 
If  you  have  the anti-lock braking system,  remember: 
It  helps avoid only the braking  skid. 
If you do  not  have 
anti-lock, then  in a braking skid (where  the wheels 
are  no longer rolling), release  enough pressure  on the 
brakes  to get  the  wheels  rolling again. This restores 
steering control.  Push the  brake pedal down steadily 
when  you  have  to stop  suddenly.  As long  as  the  wheels 
are  rolling,  you will have  steering control. 
4-1 7  

The  heavier the rain,  the  harder it  is  to see.  Even if your 
windshield  wiper blades  are  in good  shape,  a  heavy 
rain  can  make  it harder  to see  road signs  and 
traffic signals,  pavement markings, the edge  of the  road 
and  even  people walking. 
It’s  wise  to keep  your  windshield wiping  equipment in 
good  shape  and  keep  your windshield washer  tank filled 
with  washer  fluid. Replace  your windshield wiper 
inserts  when they show  signs 
of streaking  or missing 
areas  on the  windshield,  or  when strips of rubber start to 
separate from the inserts.  Driving too fast through large 
water  puddles  or  even 
going through  some  car  washes  can  cause  problems, 
too.  The  water  may  affect  your  brakes. Try to avoid 
puddles. But 
if you  can’t,  try to slow  down  before you 
hit them. 
Wet  brakes  can  cause  accidents.  They  won’t 
work  as well  in a  quick  stop  and  may  cause 
pulling to  one  side.  You  could  lose control 
of 
the vehicle. 
After  driving  through  a  large  puddle  of water 
or  a  car  wash,  apply  your  brake pedal  lightly 
until  your  brakes  work  normally. 
Hydroplaning 
Hydroplaning is  dangerous. So much  water  can  build up 
under  your  tires that they  can actually ride  on  the 
water. This  can  happen 
if the road is wet  enough  and 
you’re  going fast  enough.  When  your  vehicle  is 
hydroplaning,  it  has little or  no  contact  with  the  road. 
4-20  

If you drive  regularly  in steep country, or if you’re 
planning to visit there, here are  some tips that  can  make 
your trips  safer  and  more  enjoyable. 
Keep  your vehicle in good  shape.  Check all fluid 
levels  and also  the brakes,  tires, cooling  system 
and  transaxle.  These parts can work  hard on 
mountain  roads. Coasting  downhill in NEUTRAL  (N)  or with the 
ignition 
off is  dangerous.  Your  brakes will have 
to 
do all  the work  of slowing  down.  They  could 
Know  how to go  down  hills. The  most  important 
thing  to know  is this:  let your engine do  some  of 
the slowing  down. Shift to a lower  gear  when  you  go 
down  a steep  or long  hill. 
your engine  running  and your vehicle  in gear 
get 
so hot 
that  they  wouldn’t work  well.  You 
would then  have poor braking  or  even  none 
going  down a 
hill. You could  crash.  Always  have 
when  you go downhill. 
.. you don’t  shi-- Aown,  your -_ -._es co - ,et 
so hot that they wouldn’t work  well.  You would 
then  have  poor braking  or  even  none  going 
down  a 
hill. You could  crash.  Shift down  to let 
your  engine  assist your  brakes on 
a steep 
downhill  slope. 
Know  how  to go  uphill.  You  may  want  to shift  down  to 
a lower  gear.  The  lower  gears  help cool  your  engine 
and  transaxle,  and  you  can  climb the hill better. 
Stay in your  own  lane  when  driving on two-lane 
roads in hills  or  mountains.  Don’t  swing  wide  or  cut 
across  the center  of the  road.  Drive  at  speeds  that  let 
you  stay in your  own  lane. 
As you go  over  the  top  of a hill,  be  alert.  There  could 
be  something  in your  lane,  like a stalled  car or  an 
accident. 
You  may  see  highway  signs  on  mountains  that  warn  of  special problems.  Examples are long grades, 
passing  or no-passing  zones,  a falling rocks  area  or 
winding roads.  Be  alert to these  and take  appropriate 
action. 
4-26  

Driving on Snow or Ice 
Most of the  time, those places  where your tires  meet 
the  road probably  have  good traction. 
However, 
if there  is snow  or  ice between  your  tires and 
the  road,  you  can  have  a  very slippery situation. 
You’ll  have  a  lot less traction  or “grip” and will  need to 
be  very careful. 
I I 
What’s  the worst time  for this?  “Wet  ice.”  Very  cold 
snow  or  ice can  be slick  and  hard to drive on. But  wet 
ice  can  be  even  more  trouble because  it may  offer 
the  least traction  of  all.  You  can  get  wet  ice when  it’s 
about freezing 
(32°F; OOC) and  freezing rain begins 
to fall. Try  to avoid driving  on  wet ice until salt  and 
sand  crews  can  get  there. 
Whatever  the condition 
- smooth  ice,  packed,  blowing 
or  loose  snow 
- drive  with caution. 
If you  have  traction control or  enhanced  traction,  keep 
the  system  on.  It will  improve  your  ability  to accelerate 
when  driving 
on a  slippery  road.  Even  though  your 
vehicle  has  a traction control  system  you’ll  want  to slow 
down  and adjust your  driving  to  the  road  conditions. 
See  Traction Control  System  (TCS)  on  page 
4- 10. 
If  you  don’t  have  a  traction control or  enhanced traction 
system,  accelerate  gently. Try not to break  the  gentle 
traction.  If  you accelerate too  fast,  the  drive  wheels  will 
spin  and polish the  surface  under  the  tires  even  more. 
Unless  you  have  the anti-lock  braking system,  you’ll 
want  to brake  very  gently,  too. 
(If you  do  have 
anti-lock,  see Braking  on 
page 4-6. This  system 
improves  your  vehicle’s stability  when  you  make  a hard 
stop  on  a  slippery road.)  Whether  you  have  the 
anti-lock  braking  system  or not, you’ll  want  to  begin 
stopping  sooner than you  would  on  dry  pavement. 
4-28  

Without anti-lock  brakes, if you feel  your  vehicle 
begin to  slide,  let  up  on the  brakes  a little.  Push  the 
brake  pedal down  steadily  to get  the  most 
traction  you  can. 
Remember,  unless you  have  anti-lock, 
if you brake so 
hard that  your  wheels  stop  rolling, you’ll just slide.  Brake 
so your  wheels  always keep rolling  and  you  can  still steer. 
Whatever  your  braking system, allow greater 
following distance  on any  slippery road. 
0 Watch  for  slippery spots.  The  road might  be fine until 
you  hit a spot  that’s  covered  with ice. On  an 
otherwise  clear road,  ice patches  may  appear  in 
shaded  areas  where  the sun  can’t  reach:  around 
clumps 
of trees,  behind buildings  or  under bridges. 
Sometimes  the  surface of a curve  or  an  overpass 
may  remain icy  when the surrounding roads are 
clear.  If  you  see  a  patch of ice  ahead  of you,  brake 
before  you are on 
it. Try not to brake while you’re 
actually  on  the ice, and avoid  sudden  steering 
maneuvers. 
If You’re Caught in a Blizzard 
If you  are  stopped  by heavy  snow,  you  could be in a 
serious  situation.  You should  probably stay  with 
your  vehicle  unless  you  know  for sure  that you are 
near  help  and  you  can  hike through  the  snow. 
4-29  

Dinghy Towing 
Notice: Towing  your  vehicle  with  all four  wheels  on 
the  ground  will damage drivetrain components. 
Your  vehicle  was  not  designed  to be  towed  with all four 
wheels  on  the  ground. 
If your vehicle must  be  towed, 
you  should  use a dolly.  See “Dolly  Towing”  following  for 
more  information. 
Dolly Towing 
Your vehicle  can  be  towed  using a  dolly.  To tow  your 
vehicle using  a dolly,  follow  these  steps: 
1. Put the front  wheels  on  the  dolly. 
2. Put the vehicle in  PARK (P). 
3. Set the  parking brake  and  then  remove  the  key. 
4. Clamp the steering  wheel in a straight-ahead 
position. 
5. Release  the  parking brake. 
4-34