Extra weight in the boot?
Extra weight in the boot?
Author
Discussion

exitwound

Original Poster:

1,090 posts

196 months

Monday 20th December 2010
quotequote all
Never understood this one.

My Dad used to do this with a couple of big sandbags and it made his Cortinas handle terribly in the snow and ice as the increased inertia would make it drift easily and they would just bog down in the snow and spin the wheels trying to move the extra weight.

Helped a few stuck cars in the carpark at work to get moving by getting the passengers out the vehicle so it could drive onto some cleared surface.

My Corvette normally has no problem in snow, but once loaded with logs (big load capacity on an '87 coop), its much more of a handful.




BMWBen

4,904 posts

217 months

Monday 20th December 2010
quotequote all
I'm with you on this - the wife's car is rwd, has fat tyres and weighs nothing (smart roadster) and it's pretty epic in the snow.

Any weight in the back would just make the slides harder to control IMO.

BoRED S2upid

20,754 posts

256 months

Monday 20th December 2010
quotequote all
I used to do this when I had my BMW it just needed a little extra weight over the rear wheels never had a problem with handling especially when driving correctly for the conditions.

thegreenhell

19,944 posts

235 months

Monday 20th December 2010
quotequote all
Most front-engined cars have comparatively little weight over the rear wheels, so adding extra weight in the boot of a RWD car will aid traction by pushing the driven tyres harder onto the road. The main reason that FWD cars are generally seen as 'better' in slippery conditions is because they have the weight of the engine and gearbox pushing down directly over the driven wheels. This is also the reason why 911s and old Beetles have such good traction with the engine in the boot.