I learned the hard way yesterday that despite being four wheel drive, and even having a lockable rear diff, a Scooby is not that good in the snow.
I got caught in the snow and was trying to get home before all the roads that'd get me there became impassable (which they later did), the Scooby did fine on the flat, on bends, on slight gradients and so on, I just locked the rear diff and basically drove as Grim... suggested at the start of this thread. Nice and smooth, highest gear possible, use gear braking instead of the actual brakes, leave a large gap between me and the car in front, and so on. Some people were already abandoning their cars (stopping on hill in such conditions can pretty much mean you're fucked).
There was one hill in particular on the route that I knew would be make or break, get up that and it was relatively easy driving for the rest of the way, get stuck there, and it would be a 14 mile walk home.
Got to the hill, already one car wedged in a ditch half way up, one car had slid to a halt in the middle of it, word from up the top round the bend was a car on its roof and loads of cars waiting to come down.
Fortunately the DOT guys were already on the scene with a snow plough/gritter combo with wheel chains on, so with the help of the assembled members of the public (men like doing MANLY things when there women watching), we got the car that was stuck halfway down the hill safely back down to the car park (there's a pub at the bottom of the hill), managed to 'bounce' the car stuck in the ditch back into the road and get it down, and push the car on its roof out of the way.
The gritter then went up, came back down, and the plan was that as it went up for the second time, the cars assembled down at the bottom would follow it in convoy fashion.
Unfortunately a Mercedes Sprinter van went up behind the gritter, stupid big van, front wheel drive, wasn't carrying a load, at the steepest bit of the hill he lost all forward momentum and came to a halt. My super quick-thinking idea to avoid having to come to a stop was to gently move out to the right, carry on moving, and get round the outside of him.
The conditions on the right hand side of the road weren't as good though (there'd been a delay with the gritter getting up, down, and up again, and more snow had fallen), and the bastard Scooby just started scrabbling like a bastard, I was as light as I could on the throttle, riding the clutch so it wasn't 'snatching' too much, but at the end of the day, 300bhp going down to the wheels on a snow covered hill in sub-zero temperatures just doesn't seem to work well.
The Sprinter van eventually managed to get up, and I very gingerly rolled back a bit (wheels locked and I slid so had to do that carefully on and off), managed to roll to where there was more grip available, and very gingerly got back over to the left hand side of the road where there was more grip, got up the rest of the hill and got home. (The back end just wanted to step out all the time, not fun at all.)
Overall, the Scooby was pants in the snow (there was a guy in a 'normal' 4X4 who had a much easier time than me), the tyres (despite being in good nick with loads of tread) aren't designed for those kinds of conditions, and I think it just puts too much power down to be easily controllable.
It took me 2 /12 hours, but I did at least get home, I know a lot of people got stuck in Douglas last night, and there's pretty much a total shutdown on a lot of roads today as well. 4X4s only in a lot of places.
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