^I think it's more the fact that the road is 100% dry and it's warm outside. Even when it's cold and dry people drive weird.
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^I think it's more the fact that the road is 100% dry and it's warm outside. Even when it's cold and dry people drive weird.
Maybe. I don't know...3-4PM on a Sunday with no metering at the tunnel? Weird. Only time I hit the brakes was a mile before 40 and landing in a ~10 minute delay. Just doesn't seem....normal.
Was the same thing last weekend. Just a little pocket of slow near 40 & 70 and the rest was golden.
There's A TON of people still in town in Breck. I think a lot of people are staying up. The resorts weren't that busy though, either, so I don't know. Denver is sick of traffic maybe?
71 in Denver...everyone's golfing, biking, climbing and grilling
Good point
we are all getting weak, the past two winters have been a dud (except last april and may) and now we've got some of the best snow around, so suddenly everyone and their grandmother is here to get some of that sun baked, powder yesterday, weed for sale on main street, this is a tiny town, mountain fun
I seems like every weekend that goes by gets crazier and crazier. It will be over by the first week of april. hold on its ok to use your car horn a couple times a day
and just when you thought you saw it all and heard it all was driving from frisco to breck the other day and someone was really fucking up the flow of traffic, I breath deep, then I finally get my turn to get close to the offender, suburban, texas plates, dry as a bone pavement, tire chains smoking, loose as shit, and spitting rocks doing about 40 - 45 mph
There was a quick "story" on the news last night about CDOT beginning work this week (?) on the west-bound Twin Tunnel expansion. Are they really going to do that right before Spring Break and during the busiest month of the ski season?
I obviously see the benefit of expanding the east-bound tunnel since it opens up traffic to three lanes continuously after that, but I don't get the west-bound side construction. It'll go right back down to two lanes before you get to Idaho Springs, right? Essentially they're spending tens of millions on the tunnel expansion to delay the pinch point a mile or two?
^ I don’t think they’re expecting a bigger tunnel on WB 70 to open the traffic up. It has to be done eventually, so they’re just taking care of it while they have the frontage road detour in place.
March is the busiest month of the ski season? As far as I-70? I doubt that.
In any case, IIRC, the westbound tunnel work is to widen it and make it brighter, like the EB side, but I don't think they intend to add a lane.
I think that's true, and I recall reading that they still had the "mold" for the tunnel opening.
I don't know if it's really the busiest... but there's typically more snow (on average) and it seems like with Spring Break, it's consistently more crowded through the weekdays. Who knows- my point is that they probably should wait until the resorts close to start construction since they'll be closing lanes on the east-bound side as well. Combine that with a good storm or two, and this thread will live up to it's name for sure.
Info on the WB bore: http://www.coloradodot.info/projects/i70twintunnels
Looks like they're starting it now to get traffic back on mainline I-70 before peak ski season hits next year.Quote:
March 2014 – Reduce eastbound I-70 to 2 lanes
April 2014 – Eastbound I-70 moves onto detour route and westbound I-70 into eastbound tunnel
April 2014 - August 2014 – Tunnel blasting and rock cut blasting above both tunnel portals
December 2014 – Westbound tunnel widening work complete
December 2014 – January 2015 – Lane closures to finish wall and barrier construction
September 2015 – County Road 314 restored and retaining walls and trailhead enhancements in place
You're f'ing kidding me....more construction delays for the twin tunnels??!!
They should have just blasted the whole mountainside and been done with it.
So this thread is where we bitch about the current traffic problems due to insufficient infrastructure, then bitch about traffic problems caused by CDOT's efforts to improve the infrastructure, right?
Except the "bad" traffic season is almost over. Weekday spring break crowds are not a huge traffic consideration. IME, once mid to late march hits, weekend traffic starts to ease up dramatically. The only time it is really heavy this time of year is when it is snowing in the mountains and the weather is bad on the front range. Since they haven't even started doing anything, it seems to me that they are starting at the right time, basically as soon as the "peak" period is over. You're idea of waiting until the resorts close would make sense if it was a 6 week project, but it's not, it's many months, so starting as soon as the peak is over makes sense.
They had 2 of the 3 EB lanes closed this morning at the tunnel. Looks like they are ramping up.
^^^ yeah they were doing work getting the detour ready it looked like. Friday afternoons westbound are gonna be bad again this summer.
It'll reduce or eliminate the "oh shit it's a tunnel slam on the brakes!" effect, and it's far cheaper (to the tune of ~$6M) to do it now while the contractor is on site and has the forms built up, and while the frontage road detour is still in place. They aren't making the tunnel three lanes at this time, just getting it widened now so it's done.
I know you conservative Coloradians will hate this big government socialist program we use in California called "Chain Control" but it will help get the fucktards off the roads.
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I left Vail at 1:30 yesterday afternoon and arrived in Boulder at 3:30.
Skiing and then rock climbing in afternoon in 65 degree sunshine. Wait, sorry. This is the I70 bitch thread. My bad
Why can't we just have a state law that requires one of the following to drive mountain roads in the winter:
1. AWD or 4WD with snow tires or all season tires. Tires must have sufficient tread depth (no lower than 5/32)
2. FWD with snow tires of sufficient tread depth
Then if you are involved in an accident, stuck on the side of the road, or are spinning out going uphill, and you don't have one of the two noted above then you get a hefty fine, say, I don't know, $3000.
On top of that, I'm a fan of yearly vehicle state inspections.
And then, on top of that, we could require a snow driving test which is required to be renewed every three years. Not sure the logistics of that because you would need to have this course at a location which would have snow on the course pretty much the whole winter.
you'd take 20% of the cars off the road in colorado, there is no way some of the cars driving around would pass a state mandated inspection.
common problems:
bad brakes
cracked windsheilds
bald tires
(really bald tires?)
missing bumpers
headlights/signals
the list is endless (you just can't inspect my car and I'm cool with the law)
I'm cool with AWD/4WD with snow or all season but any 2wd should have chains in the vehicle and installed when things get nasty. FWD vs RWD is a pointless argument, for the most part people can't figure out how to get either moving in the snow anyway.
I would be down for vehicle inspections but they would over regulate and not really help anything. At least to do with I-70 anyway.
Edit: let's add in a test to see if you can actually operate your 4wd. You'd be surprised how much that tricky detail can be a problem.
Calm the fuck down. 2wd with studs are ok too. Although you're right, I have never tried it and do greatly question if studs make a dick of difference if you're spinning on sloppy soupy shit, not ice.
I also highly doubt that adding studs to a 2wd makes it more capable than a AWD with decent all seasons in all conditions. But you're right, I have never tried it.
I've owned several RWD FWD AWD and 4WD vehicles.
Although I agree with you in various circumstances, I don't think that is the equation.
It's people with bald tires and poor snow driving skills.
So then is FWD with bald tires greater or less than AWD with bald tires?
I would presume AWD would be greater not just in a straight line traction test, but in a fishtail recovery.
Either way, why lobby so hard for FWD?
Are AWD vehicles and ones that can turn the AWD on and off not fairly affordable by now?
Just curious why people lobby so hard for them.
eta: I know people will lobby for them for plenty more years and would need to be grandfathered into a law anyway, so I'm fine with an equipment law as per above with appropriate tires being the majority of the penalty infraction for disobeying in the event of a crash etc. One of the positives of a beefed up snow tire law is that it is free to implement. Get the message on the CDOT boards and scare people with the potential of a fine, they will buy some tires.
This is what happens when they legalize weed. Too many stoners waking up late and then driving in the left lane at 50 mph.
MPG. FWD is hands down the winner. For what Colorado has to offer, unless you're running a snow plow business, FWD with snow tires and a little bit of brain function will get you through just fine. If you don't mind the noise of studs and staying on maintained roads then you can probably even turn off that brain function.
We often roll up I-70 in my friends Jetta TDI pulling down 50 MPG. Can't do that in my truck. She's never had a problem and she runs non-studded snow tires. She's the exception though.
My reasoning isn't for accidents, you can't fix stupid. It's for getting started once you have to stop on an incline. Accidents kick off the clusterfuck, spinning tires keep it going on for hours.
I think once Atlanta, being the communication center of the world, got an inch...such a catastrophic winter(*#$%^(..the slipping and sliding....the world is coming to an end.. WTF is a snow tire?? LOL.
2WD with studless snows is more capable than AWD with all-seasons. A good all-season with sufficient tread is only marginal in any sort of snow or ice. Now go and put some good snow tires on a Subaru and you've got yourself an unstoppable I-70 cruiser (until a bunch of idiots start crashing in to each other - or you).
Drive it at 2am
Get CDOT to stop with the three snowplows in formation at 20mph so nobody can pass for 30 miles.
We're running snows (no studs) on my wife's subaru. "Unstoppable" is not the word I'd use to describe it. It's the only vehicle I have ever gotten stuck. Sure I was trying to drive through a 2' deep wind drift but it still didn't make it. For plowed roads it does fine but really no better than my truck, does better on fuel though so for long trips it's a little nicer.
In order of most importance to least in snow driving:
DRIVER
Tires
Drivetrain
Regardless, the point isn't which is better, the point is that we should have a law that results in tickets/big fines when someone is stuck on I-70 and has inadequate equipment. So, if you have mad skillz and a RWD with bald tires but never get stuck, you won't ever get a ticket.
Hey, Consumer Reports sez the Tesla is the best overall car, so, no problem. Pass a law that requires Teslas, not chains.