I have some time off later in the month and want to spend some of it cross-country skiing.
A lot of the resorts are just off the highway, and roads will be well plowed, but I still wonder about the Insight, since it's so light. One of the most common things I've seen happen is that it may be above freezing during the day, but then drop below after the sun sets at 4:30, resulting in slush re-freezing on the paved roads by ski area parking lots.
Also, just in case--have anyone ever used chains with the Insight? There doesn't seem to be a lot of clearance around the wheel wells.
I keep reminding myself of all the little European cars in "On Her Majesty's Secret Service" and the VW Beetles I used to see bombing around in snow in Maine, but for all I know, all those steel vehicles still weighed more than 1900 pounds.
Anyone go skiing with their Insight? Other than silly people overestimating their SUV's abilities, what else should I watch out for?
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2003 Insight CVT #562, "Mouse"
The last Honda I'll ever buy.
I also have a vested interest in the outcome of this thread.
I'm about to take a 2 week marathon road trip (one of... 15-25 I've taken in the last 6 years) from KY-OR; I won't be taking any really high elevation mountain passes (besides the continental divide and such) but I will be in snowy areas. I just recently got my Insight and don't have any experience with it and snow or ice.
In general, what are your experience(s) with Insights in packed snow? Ice? Plowed roads with tall piles of snow? Any major problems?
Other than getting stuck up on top of a pile of snow, I should think that lightness would be a good thing for a car in the winter, less mass to accellerate and maneuver.
Choosing high quality snow tires seems to be a much more important factor (on any car).
Does anyone know the front to back ratio of weight on the Insight?
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Kip Munro
The laws of physics don't need changing, but rather our attitude and values. 72.8 LMPG
The weight of the car only determines how narrow the winter tires should be. A heavier car with very wide tires will have problems finding grip in snow. Although hard to believe at first the insight does have a similar ground clearance of many other cars.
Use winter tires in one of the following sizes
165/65R14
175/65R14
155/80R13
175/70R13
And carry a tow line (buy one specially made for this)
know where the ring eyebolt that screws to the front bumber is located and how to install it. This is the only safe way to get pulled out of deep snow if you get stuck.
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2000 Insight 5spd with 290,000 Km
Daily driver (previously used for autoslalom & track lapping)
Collision avoidance and Track driving instructor
...for the half-dozen or so days a year I want to drive up I-90 or Highway 2 to the pass to go skiing, I should invest in a set of snow tires and a winch cable?
No hostility or sarcasm intended--just want to be really clear that the Insight cannot traverse even plowed snow or ice in its factory configuration. If that's true, then I'll look into the ski resort's shuttle.
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2003 Insight CVT #562, "Mouse"
The last Honda I'll ever buy.
Jsanford, I made it through a Cqnadian winter on OEM tires! I cross a kilometer of unplowerd field just to get to the nearest plowed road. OK.....so I'm totally crazy what can I say? After one particularly bad occasion using the Insight as a snowplow while saying a dozen hail Marys ricocheting through something that resembled a snow filled bobsled run, I decided to use the CRX as a winter beater. My feeling is that if you can't make it with an Insight and good tires then you probably won't make it in any other 2WD vehicle either. Around here they say that an inexperienced driver in a four wheel drive will just get stuck that much deeper and be a bigger pain to pull out. 4WD inspires overconfidence.
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Kip Munro
The laws of physics don't need changing, but rather our attitude and values. 72.8 LMPG
A tow line is a rope with hooks at the end for pulling a car gently.
It costs about $10
Some people say OEM all season tires are "OK" or even "good" in snow and ice, but these people haven't tried winter tires because they don't know what they are missing!
Remember: "ignorance is bliss"
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2000 Insight 5spd with 290,000 Km
Daily driver (previously used for autoslalom & track lapping)
Collision avoidance and Track driving instructor
Living in Canada, and personally making the hour and a half trip to Collingwood (Blue mountain about 1.5 hours north of Toronto) or the trip to school in Orillia (Georgian College 2.5 hours north of Toronto) I can saftley say I have experienced some of the harshest conditions an insight has seen.
Winter tires are a must, the 165/65 R14 Bridgestone Blizzaks are a nite and day comparison to stock tires when the weather goes south (Or noth in this case)
On a trip home from Blue mountain one night about 2 feet of snow had fallen, although the plows were able to keep the snow on the roads to a minimum, they couldnt control the speed of which a snowdrift could grow. I found myself having to hit these drifts at 80km an hour to avoid getting stuck in the middle of no where. Whene I got home the undercovers on the insight had been torn off, the following winter driving in a constant 1foot for about 40 minutes caused the same efect, for the covers to be torn off. That will be your biggest problem in the snow (And most expensive if you cant talk honda into replacing it)
My argument was
"Why the hell would you sell the insight in canada if it cant handle the bloddy winters which consume 6 months of the year"
Ah, I did not now that the snow accumulated accross the highway in a bundle was a "snowdrift"
It is the "1" thing the Insight is worst in. The car is so light that when you hit a big one, the seat belt is used (like you just hit something big). I never experienced this in my previous larger cars.
But I figure it is not only the low weight of the car that create the decelaration but the low bumper/air dam that acts like a plow.
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