EvergreenZ71
Full Access Member
Avoid the butter flavor … don’t eat yellow snow.
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So do I. It really works well, particularly in the heavy wet snow.I use Pam on my snow blower chute. Keeps the snow from building up/sticking like that.
Avoid the butter flavor … don’t eat yellow snow.
Avoid the butter flavor … don’t eat yellow snow.
Northern Minnesota here. Both of my tail light assemblies have to be replaced because the ice formed around the cable and got so heavy it snapped the plug inside the assembly.We live in Michigans upper peninsula, about 225 miles north of Green Bay WI. Typically we get 200-300” of snow per year. One thing I’ve noticed on our RST with 22” wheels is the snow build up in the wheel wells is constant, tires start to rub and it needs cleaning out. Most nights it falls off in the garage but it stil needs regular cleaning. Just a few pics to show this, and I’ll add winter tires next season. I love the Tahoe just an fyi.
I'm in the lower peninsula and have noticed the exact same issue. One area, in particular, is the rear bumper and even around the exhaust/muffler. The rear bumper I've dropped ice chunks the size of basketballs out of there.We live in Michigans upper peninsula, about 225 miles north of Green Bay WI. Typically we get 200-300” of snow per year. One thing I’ve noticed on our RST with 22” wheels is the snow build up in the wheel wells is constant, tires start to rub and it needs cleaning out. Most nights it falls off in the garage but it stil needs regular cleaning. Just a few pics to show this, and I’ll add winter tires next season. I love the Tahoe just an fyi.
I completely agree that the felt liners are a huge factor if not the main factor. Salt and ice really stick nicely to the inside of them.Actually, I think it is the felt type liners of the wheel wells. They are used to keep road noise down, but ice and snow adhere to them vs a hard plastic liner that with one good bump would fracture it out...
mud flaps no a decent job of keeping it off the area behind the wheel, but the wheel-wells fill very badly. I am getting a new vehicle soon, and I am gonna try and spray the felt when it is brand new, with a healthy dose of silicone spray see if that helps. I was just in snow and very cold, and there was less that 1/2" between the tire and ice build up, and it does not come off.I'm in the lower peninsula and have noticed the exact same issue. One area, in particular, is the rear bumper and even around the exhaust/muffler. The rear bumper I've dropped ice chunks the size of basketballs out of there.
Recently picked up some mud flaps that I'm going to put on but we're basically at the end of our snowy season aside from an event in late March-early April, which seems to be a regular occurrence the past few years.
I completely agree that the felt liners are a huge factor if not the main factor. Salt and ice really stick nicely to the inside of them.
Once I get the mud flaps on (aftermarket, not factory) I'll report back.