Forum: Internet Links Topic: snow > Atlanta started by: Malcolm Posted by Malcolm on Jan. 29 2014,11:54
< From here >.
Posted by GORDON on Jan. 29 2014,11:58
Retards, all.
Posted by Troy on Jan. 29 2014,12:04
It's hilarious. And sad. But mostly funny.
Posted by Malcolm on Jan. 29 2014,12:07
QUOTE Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed also weighed in. He laid part of the blame on local businesses, saying they contributed to the gridlock by letting workers leave at the same time. QUOTE Georgia Gov. Nathan Deal said the region was caught off guard by weather predictions. QUOTE Yvonne Williams, who works on transportation infrastructure projects in Atlanta, said there needed to be a community-wide coalition of first responders ready to take this on. QUOTE Many Atlantans say there needs to be more mass transit and roads. ![]() Posted by GORDON on Jan. 29 2014,12:13
I remember what happened once when George Bush let a city deal with their own incompetent leadership.
Posted by thibodeaux on Jan. 29 2014,12:22
Racist!
Posted by Malcolm on Jan. 29 2014,12:27
(GORDON @ Jan. 29 2014,14:13) QUOTE I remember what happened once when George Bush let a city deal with their own incompetent leadership. DC? Posted by TheCatt on Jan. 29 2014,12:31
Raleigh did this in 2005.Ever since then, they do things like cancel classes yesterday when snow wasn't even forecast until the late afternoon. Posted by TPRJones on Jan. 29 2014,13:38
I used to live in a snowy climate and drive in it and shovel it and even walk to work uphill (both ways) in it and all that stuff. I know snow. I miss snow.I now live in a place that never gets ice and snow. They just aren't prepared for it because it never happens. They don't have the equipment or the knowledge to handle it. Additionally down here in the south a very high percentage of our urban roads are elevated, which means more snow and ice coverage instead of melting on the still-above-freezing ground. In the 30 miles I drive to work about 22 miles of it is elevated roadway, and that's pretty typical. Additionally the ice that forms under these conditions is more nasty than driving in snow. You can't see it at all, but you are driving along fine on regular clear concrete and suddenly you are on a two-inch thick sheet of slick ice with no visual warning. Most people down here don't know how to deal with that. So some of the confusion and over-caution is justified. I imagine y'all would be about as good with knowing what to do if land-locked Ohio was suddenly hit with a coastal hurricane storm surge. Are you prepared for that? No, of course not. That having all been said, it is pretty funny to watch them squirm. Well, until you see one of your neighbors carted off because she froze to death in 30 degree weather. But she was really really old and poor, so it's not too surprising; they tend to drop like flies those rare time when it gets cold down here. Posted by GORDON on Jan. 29 2014,13:40
I will probably get in trouble for saying this, but I feel like I should help:The secret to driving in 2 inches of snow is.... slow down. Posted by TPRJones on Jan. 29 2014,13:43
Heh.It's not the snow, though. It's the ice. The secret there is don't try to turn at all. Straight lines until you clear the bridge/overpass/elevated road. If the road is curved, go slow enough that you stop before you reach the edge. Get out and get into another car pointing the right way. Posted by GORDON on Jan. 29 2014,13:59
I am driving in the winter weather constantly. The trick that solves 97% of all problems I encounter is: slow down.
Posted by TPRJones on Jan. 29 2014,14:16
I've watched cars crashing uncontrollably on black ice at two miles an hour. Sure the damage is minimal, but they still aren't able to stop running into things and get turned the proper direction on the ice.Is there a speed slow enough to drive properly on black ice without the proper winter tires? Even I've had to get out and physically push the front end of my car around to get it pointed in the right direction on a couple of black-iced road occasions, and I've had years of snow-driving experience. Besides, it's not the steering or stopping that's the real danger, it's the flyovers. You start sliding backwards at the top of one of those it doesn't matter what you do, you'll be going 50+ by the time you hit bottom if you haven't hit the sides or other cars first. We had a tanker flip over the railing and fall off onto the road bed below doing that last Friday, made a real mess of the interstate. Posted by TPRJones on Jan. 29 2014,14:28
It occurs to me to ask if you even get iced roads up there. Where I was living before that had snow on the ground from October to May we never got iced roads, because we were getting snow. Once there's snow on it, it won't ice like that.This isn't snow, which is textured and drivable with skill and practice. This isn't sleet or slush, which still has some grip. This is pure ice - fallen as rain and frozen in place - sometimes inches thick and so crystal clear as to be completely invisible. Until someone comes through and puts some sand/salt/gravel/etc on it, it's just not drivable at any speed with regular road tires. EDIT - That reminds me of the time when I was a kid living in Nacogdoches when we had a really crazy winter. There was nearly six inches of ice on some of the roads for about a week. It was really cold for long enough to freeze the ground, then it hovered right at 32 degrees and started to rain and freeze up and just keep building up more and more clear slick ice on everything. Not just the bridges but the regular roads as well, which is very rare for that part of the country. We had some neighbors living downhill next to the creek that couldn't get out for food. Not just couldn't drive out, but didn't have the gear to walk up that iced hill, either. We tried to slide some canned food down to them but the first one picked up so much speed it exploded and knocked loose some bricks when it hit the side of the house. We had to go find a rope to lower them down the hill more carefully in a box instead. Never seen ice quite like that again. Completely clear all the way through, and so slick you couldn't put anything on it unless it was completely flat or it would start sliding away. Posted by TheCatt on Jan. 29 2014,15:18
Slowing down doesn't fix everything (going up a hill). But it does help tremendously. The best advice, imho, is: Stay Home. Posted by Paul on Jan. 29 2014,15:36
![]() Posted by GORDON on Jan. 29 2014,16:46
So, they faked up the Atlanta skyline for the walking dead?
Posted by Paul on Jan. 29 2014,17:36
I dunno. I got it from < here > and they said Atlanta.If I Google "Atlanta skyline" I see the building with the golden/pointy top, so the bottom pic is Atlanta. The Walking Dead pic is probably a different freeway from a different direction, so it shows a different part of the city. |