Nissan Juke and snow

Author
Discussion

Tim M DB7V

Original Poster:

92 posts

187 months

Monday 13th December 2010
quotequote all
Really boring I know but Mrs M bought a Nissan Juke and it (Daisy) has spent the last 2 weeks in the garage because we couldn't get it up the drive---compacted snow/ice.
She got it on the assumption that the traction control system would do the biz.
Her last car was a Mini Cooper(BMW) and that was brilliant in snow and ice.
We spoke to another local Juke owner recently who had no problems in these conditions.
Question--does the Juke have an active traction control system that alters the drive to each wheel (it's front wheel drive) or is it passive and only reduces engine power?
Or is our traction system not working?
I've lived in NE Scotland for 30 years and have driven in snow often so no foot to the floor in first gear--I know how to do it but this car is pants. The thing just spins the bloody wheels and goes nowhere.
Any useful comments and info appreciated.

mike13

730 posts

195 months

Monday 13th December 2010
quotequote all
Same problem with my 2 wheel drive qashqai,dire in Edinburgh last week,ordered snow socks which came today,hopefully help.If not new car in the new year.

Petrolhead_Rich

4,659 posts

205 months

Monday 13th December 2010
quotequote all
Tyres?

ETA - not necessarily winter tyres, just not "ditch finders"

Edited by Petrolhead_Rich on Monday 13th December 20:13

MG-FIDO

453 posts

250 months

Monday 13th December 2010
quotequote all
Petrolhead_Rich said:
Tyres?
I assume Tim has some, yes.

davepoth

29,395 posts

212 months

Monday 13th December 2010
quotequote all
Did the other local Juke owner have a 4wd car?

MondeoMan1981

2,435 posts

196 months

Monday 13th December 2010
quotequote all
Heard a few stories about the Quashquai (or however you spell it!) being bks in the snow - including from a chap who works in a Nissan dealer selling them..

Negative Creep

25,442 posts

240 months

Monday 13th December 2010
quotequote all
Look on the bright side - if she does crash it you won't be able to tell

V88Dicky

7,341 posts

196 months

Monday 13th December 2010
quotequote all
Cars that look like 4x4s but are actually 2wd? If I was a sarcastic b'tard I'd have a little chuckle.

As already said, its hopefully just choice of tyres.

insanojackson

5,938 posts

257 months

Monday 13th December 2010
quotequote all
was looking at these at the weekend. quite nice however just a normal front wheel drive car really apart from the range topper

mike13

730 posts

195 months

Monday 13th December 2010
quotequote all
Nope it's not the tyres,it is a nice vehicle,like the height,good mph,just poor in the snow,strangely thought about a juke prior to buying qashqai

HellDiver

5,708 posts

195 months

Monday 13th December 2010
quotequote all
Probably on the OE Bridgestones (which are similar to the RE050A in tread pattern), which are quite frankly pants in the snow.

When you change tyres, bung on a set of Quatrac 3SUV or other similar 4-season tyre.

Tim M DB7V

Original Poster:

92 posts

187 months

Monday 13th December 2010
quotequote all
The Crack Fox said:
You've called the car Daisy ? Giving cars a name is the gayest thing on earth !

Anyhoo, tyres choice is a big thing but I suspect the Juke is your typical over-styled and under-engineered school run motor as opposed to a pukka 4x4.
You don't remember Daisy Duke out of 'The Dukes of Hazzard' TV series then!!!

Thanks for the replies.

I'm hoping to get Qatracs fitted tomorrow---I've got them on my Astra and they are brilliant.
Anyone know what Anti-skid system the Duke uses?

Edited by Tim M DB7V on Monday 13th December 21:26

rallycross

13,440 posts

250 months

Monday 13th December 2010
quotequote all
What was the problem, was the traction control stopping you from moving?

I had this due to overly invasive traction control (ie rubbish cheap system that cuts the power so much you cant go) with a smart for two that got stuck in its own snow tracks, as soon as power was applied and wheel spin started the system cut power - then stuck, and no button to switch it off.


Or could just be wide low profile tyres, skinny knobbly tyres is what you need!

Buy some winter tyres for the front.

AndyT77

1,755 posts

175 months

Monday 13th December 2010
quotequote all
Tim M DB7V said:
The Crack Fox said:
You've called the car Daisy ? Giving cars a name is the gayest thing on earth !

Anyhoo, tyres choice is a big thing but I suspect the Juke is your typical over-styled and under-engineered school run motor as opposed to a pukka 4x4.
You don't remember Daisy Duke out of 'The Dukes of Hazzard' TV series then!!!

Thanks for the replies.

I'm hoping to get Qatracs fitted tomorrow---I've got them on my Astra and they are brilliant.
Anyone know what Anti-skid system the Duke uses?

Edited by Tim M DB7V on Monday 13th December 21:26
Daisy Duke was a picture of beauty though. Your car looks odd. If i had a Duke i'd call it Mongo or something.

B'stard Child

30,109 posts

259 months

Monday 13th December 2010
quotequote all
Negative Creep said:
Look on the bright side - if she does crash it you won't be able to tell
Well it made me laugh so thank you

rofl

JukieMcJukerson

3 posts

173 months

Tuesday 14th December 2010
quotequote all
Juke has traction control but it can be turned off. The AWD version has two AWD settings. The "AWD" setting distributes torque evenly to all wheels (25% to each) and when slippage occurs the car diverts torque to wheels getting more grip. It will not divert all power off of a slipping wheel, nor will it apply the brakes to a slipping wheel. With traction control off it should spin all four tires as much as you'd like.

Juke also has a torque vectored AWD setting (AWD-V). This setting allows for better maneuvering on pavement by allowing 100% of rear torque (50% of total torque) to be put on the outside rear wheel in a turn. AWD-V isn't meant for snow and AWD isn't meant for the streets.

The Juke distributes torque via electronically controlled wet-clutch packs on the rear axle and not with viscous couplings. The Juke's AWD is generally much better than the one's that come in most cars, who's AWD systems are often mislabeled or poorly described. The Juke's AWD is more similar to S-AWC or Haldex systems. Been working great for me.

The only explanation is crappy OEM tires. Also, if there is no traction to be had on an incline (as on ice), no AWD system from any manufacturer is going to get you up that hill. Sorry.

Edited by JukieMcJukerson on Tuesday 14th December 01:23

Luke.

11,359 posts

263 months

Tuesday 14th December 2010
quotequote all
JukieMcJukerson said:
Juke has traction control but it can be turned off. The AWD version has two AWD settings. The "AWD" setting distributes torque evenly to all wheels (25% to each) and when slippage occurs the car diverts torque to wheels getting more grip. It will not divert all power off of a slipping wheel, nor will it apply the brakes to a slipping wheel. With traction control off it should spin all four tires as much as you'd like.

Juke also has a torque vectored AWD setting (AWD-V). This setting allows for better maneuvering on pavement by allowing 100% of rear torque (50% of total torque) to be put on the outside rear wheel in a turn. AWD-V isn't meant for snow and AWD isn't meant for the streets.

The Juke distributes torque via electronically controlled wet-clutch packs on the rear axle and not with viscous couplings. The Juke's AWD is generally much better than the one's that come in most cars, who's AWD systems are often mislabeled or poorly described. The Juke's AWD is more similar to S-AWC or Haldex systems. Been working great for me.

The only explanation is crappy OEM tires. Also, if there is no traction to be had on an incline (as on ice), no AWD system on the market is going to get you up that hill. Sorry.
Lovely, detailed explanation, accept it's not the AWD version. smile

JukieMcJukerson

3 posts

173 months

Tuesday 14th December 2010
quotequote all
Luke. said:
Lovely, detailed explanation, accept it's not the AWD version. smile
Forgive me. I'm quick to defend our Juke's honor. Best car we've ever had and the excellent traction technology was a big selling point for us.

Only one thing for it then, actual snow tires and not all-season ones. Maybe he could get away with a set of Continental ExtemeContact all-season tires. They seem to be biased more towards winter driving.

Edited by JukieMcJukerson on Tuesday 14th December 01:38


Edited by JukieMcJukerson on Tuesday 14th December 01:39

vit4

3,507 posts

183 months

Tuesday 14th December 2010
quotequote all
JukieMcJukerson said:
Juke has traction control but it can be turned off. The AWD version has two AWD settings. The "AWD" setting distributes torque evenly to all wheels (25% to each) and when slippage occurs the car diverts torque to wheels getting more grip. It will not divert all power off of a slipping wheel, nor will it apply the brakes to a slipping wheel. With traction control off it should spin all four tires as much as you'd like.

Juke also has a torque vectored AWD setting (AWD-V). This setting allows for better maneuvering on pavement by allowing 100% of rear torque (50% of total torque) to be put on the outside rear wheel in a turn. AWD-V isn't meant for snow and AWD isn't meant for the streets.

The Juke distributes torque via electronically controlled wet-clutch packs on the rear axle and not with viscous couplings. The Juke's AWD is generally much better than the one's that come in most cars, who's AWD systems are often mislabeled or poorly described. The Juke's AWD is more similar to S-AWC or Haldex systems. Been working great for me.

The only explanation is crappy OEM tires. Also, if there is no traction to be had on an incline (as on ice), no AWD system from any manufacturer is going to get you up that hill. Sorry.

Edited by JukieMcJukerson on Tuesday 14th December 01:23
scratchchin

redtwin

7,518 posts

195 months

Tuesday 14th December 2010
quotequote all
I wonder if Jukie is really one of these people?. hehe

http://newsroom.nissan-europe.com/uk/en-gb/About/C...