MINI2 Header Logo

MINI2

Fuel for your MINI obsession

Welcome to MINI2.
You are currently viewing MINI2 as a guest.
Please register by clicking this link or login:
       
Search forums: Show: Advanced: Forums or Members or Tags
Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Rate Thread
Old Oct 27th, 2003, 04:38 PM   #1
DBUSCEMI
MINI2 Newbie
 
Join Date: Aug 2003
Location: Upstate, NY
Local Time: 07:35 PM
Posts: 16
Offline
Driving your Mini in the snow! Good or Bad?

My Chili Red Mini Cooper is on order. Hope to have it within a month. Can't wait.

I live in Upstate NY where it is about to start snowing soon.

Does anyone here drive their Mini in the snow or during snowstorms?

How does it handle? Truthfully.

I drive a small Honda Del Sol now and that doesn't handle too well in the snow.

Can't wait to hear from you.

Thanks.
United States   Reply With Quote
Alt Today
Sponsors

Sponsored Links


Registered members do not see Google Ads posts, they can also post messages, pictures, and classified adverts.
Register your free account today and become a member of MINI2 - MINI Forum
   
Old Oct 27th, 2003, 04:40 PM   #2 (permalink)
MiniMan7
Let's Motor.
 
MiniMan7's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: Hamilton, Ontario
Local Time: 09:35 PM
Posts: 2,891
Offline
Send a message via MSN to MiniMan7
With snow tires - Good!
Without snow tires - Bad!

Personally, I store my MINI in the winter, but I've seen MINI's on the road in very bad snow storms and such. As long as you have good snow tires, you'll be able to plow through the snow without a problem.

-Adam
Canada View MiniMan7's Electric Blue & White 1st Gen MINI Cooper S Profile   Reply With Quote
Old Oct 27th, 2003, 07:09 PM   #3 (permalink)
HarryHBMCC
MINI2 Master
 
HarryHBMCC's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2002
Location: Guelph, Ontario, Can
Local Time: 07:35 PM
Posts: 2,655
Offline
Send a message via Yahoo to HarryHBMCC
Some of us rally in winter in our MINI Coopers and they do very well. As Adam just said, with snow tires it is a great car but with performance (either summer or all-season) tires it isn't so good which isn't a surprise really.

Please come and check out the wheels & tyres forum for previous discussions about snow tires.

Harry

MINI Cooper Cabrio: now the car with go cart handling really feels like an open go cart!
"... the only man that can come home at 3 am in the morning without getting into trouble with his spouse is the owner of a British sports car!" -- Phil Bailey
Canada View HarryHBMCC's Hyper Blue & Dark Blue 1st Gen MINI Cooper Convertible Profile   Reply With Quote
Old Oct 27th, 2003, 07:29 PM   #4 (permalink)
dmholmes
MINI2 Senior
 
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: Upstate NY
Local Time: 08:35 PM
Posts: 356
Offline
I drove in the middle of one of the worst snow storms we had last year (Christmas day, upstate NY) and had no problems whatsoever with the base 15" all seasons. I do have the ASC/DSC option though which I know helps. There were a number of cars off the road and one SUV that had given up and pulled off under an overpass. Just motored on by. At some points it was so deep that the snow was coming up over the hood and it just kept plugging along. So personally, the all seasons seem fine, but I'm sure snows would be a big improvement. Might be different too for the folks with the bigger tire/wheel combos.

2004 Winning Blue Mazda RX-8
United States View dmholmes's Indi Blue & White 1st Gen MINI Cooper Profile   Reply With Quote
Old Oct 27th, 2003, 07:39 PM   #5 (permalink)
stryder
MINI2 Privilege Member
Sponsor/Moderator/Other
 
Join Date: Jul 2002
Location: Cleveland
Local Time: 07:35 PM
Posts: 3,267
Offline
I was driving through Christmas day as well, several times, on unplowed roads. But I had snows on.

Define upstate NY. If you live the lower hudson valley, you could probably get by with all-seasons, if you can avoid driving during the few really snowy days that happen. If you live the capital region or farther north, you're probably better off getting snow tires. If you live anywhere in the western/upstate part, you positively better get snow tires.

When in doubt, get snow tires. They're cheap and your MINI will be a great winter car. And you can save your summer tires + rims for dry weather, since they'll be worn less and you can get higher performance onces.

There's a ton of other threads on snow driving try a search. I like to summarize it (with snow tires) as very predictable and quite capable for a FWD car if you're careful and go slow, but you can't plow snow. So don't try to drive in anything over 4" deep or you'll get stuck and probably break something.

Magic 8-ball was correct. All be in awe of Magic 8 ball.
United States View stryder's Hyper Blue & White 1st Gen MINI Cooper S Profile   Reply With Quote
Old Oct 27th, 2003, 09:03 PM   #6 (permalink)
HarryHBMCC
MINI2 Master
 
HarryHBMCC's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2002
Location: Guelph, Ontario, Can
Local Time: 07:35 PM
Posts: 2,655
Offline
Send a message via Yahoo to HarryHBMCC
The 175/65R15" all-seasons are not 'performance all-seasons' which is a bit of an oxymoron and the narrow tires probably help compared to the 16" and 17" all-seasons. Still, some claim the 205/45R17 all-season Goodyears are fine in snow. I wouldn't chance them myself though.

Harry

MINI Cooper Cabrio: now the car with go cart handling really feels like an open go cart!
"... the only man that can come home at 3 am in the morning without getting into trouble with his spouse is the owner of a British sports car!" -- Phil Bailey
Canada View HarryHBMCC's Hyper Blue & Dark Blue 1st Gen MINI Cooper Convertible Profile   Reply With Quote
Old Jan 4th, 2004, 07:11 PM   #7 (permalink)
KlausR
MINI2 Senior
 
KlausR's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Germany (NRW)
Local Time: 02:35 AM
Posts: 507
Offline
I brought up this thread again as I had my first real snow experience in my MINI today. We had some snowfall last night (barely an inch), but our "Mr Plow" road service was not prepared for this (we have approximately 5 snow days a year) and when I drove to work this morning the roads were all white with a nice layer of fresh or compressed snow.

I was really impressed how well the MCS handled - I had expected much more understeer. But instead turn in with a little verve (according to the grip level) and the rear end starts moving, just enough to compensate mid-corner understeer. Quite similar to what Iīve experienced in the dry or the wet but of course much smoother and funnier. On the other hand a significant amount of traction wasnīt really present, but with a reasonable top speed of 35 mph there wasnīt much power to put down either.

BTW: Iīm driving Goodyear UltraGrip EMT tires in 195/55 R16 H and now I can say that they feel quite good under all conditions.

After all, as far as I am concerned the next snow storm may come.

Klaus

Donīt bother me with: Vans, SUVs and Grandpatronic
Germany View KlausR's Electric Blue & White 1st Gen MINI Cooper S Profile   Reply With Quote
Old Jan 4th, 2004, 09:13 PM   #8 (permalink)
snarl
NON STOP
 
snarl's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: Pacific NW, USA
Local Time: 01:35 AM
Posts: 210
Offline
All season fun.

I don't know anything about DEEP snow...

I had my first snow experience today actually. Just a couple of inches of the white stuff. I have an '04 MCS JCW with factory all seasons. I thought it did well. It is my first front wheel drive car and I understand that makes a difference in the snow. My 3 year old daughter (tucked neatly away in her MINI Isofix car seat) shouted "WEEEEE!" with every bootleg (handbrake) turn we pulled in a large parking lot.

Now this is fun:
United States View snarl's Solid Black & White 1st Gen MINI Cooper S Profile   Reply With Quote
Old Jan 5th, 2004, 01:44 AM   #9 (permalink)
Pamlico
Dead Man's Curve? Feh.
 
Pamlico's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun 2002
Location: Rochester, NY
Local Time: 08:35 PM
Posts: 1,176
Offline
Send a message via AIM to Pamlico
I live in the Rochester (NY) area and drove my MCS all last winter fitted with steel wheels and Blizzaks. No problems at all. We have a relatively steep driveway and I had no difficulties climbing it in the snow - several neighbors actually commented they were surprised to see how easily it managed it.

Once the performance run flats were replaced with the Blizzaks the car was transformed.
United States Male View Pamlico's British Racing Green & Black 1st Gen MINI Cooper S Profile   Reply With Quote
Old Jan 5th, 2004, 01:48 AM   #10 (permalink)
NEMINI
NEMINI.org
 
Join Date: Sep 2002
Local Time: 07:35 PM
Posts: 7,866
Offline
The Goodyear all-seasons are 16" tires BTW and thats what I used last winter, and will be using this winter also. A lot is down to how one drives.
United States View NEMINI's Silk Green & Black 1st Gen MINI Cooper Profile   Reply With Quote
Old Jan 5th, 2004, 06:54 PM   #11 (permalink)
jmegown
MINI2 Newbie
 
Join Date: May 2003
Location: Iowa
Local Time: 07:35 PM
Posts: 38
Offline
The Goodyear all-seasons do fine on Iowa snow...
United States   Reply With Quote
Old Jan 7th, 2004, 11:29 PM   #12 (permalink)
EdHead
MINI2 Newbie
 
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Montreal
Local Time: 08:35 PM
Posts: 10
Offline
Canada winter tires a must

I drove my MINI to work in 20 cm. (about 8") of snow three days after I got it and had no trouble, except I wasn't crazy about the way it bottomed out on unplowed roads where the snow had accumulated between the tire tracks (athough the dealer assured me that the important components on the underside of the car are protected). I now take my wife's SUV to work in snowstorms. I have a 65km (40mi) round trip while she takes the kids around the corner to school. BOTTOM LINE: in normal winter conditions and with the winter wheel package, I have complete faith in the MINI.
Canada   Reply With Quote
Old Jan 7th, 2004, 11:43 PM   #13 (permalink)
stryder
MINI2 Privilege Member
Sponsor/Moderator/Other
 
Join Date: Jul 2002
Location: Cleveland
Local Time: 07:35 PM
Posts: 3,267
Offline
The power steering fan (at last check) is rather unprotected, so if you do snow plow (in 4" or more of snow) for a long time, you run the risk of having the fan overheat. Its pretty obvious to see the fan if you look under the front of the car.

But yes, if you don't have over 4" of snow, you're perfectly fine..

Magic 8-ball was correct. All be in awe of Magic 8 ball.
United States View stryder's Hyper Blue & White 1st Gen MINI Cooper S Profile   Reply With Quote
Alt Today
Sponsors

Sponsored Links


Registered members do not see Ads posts, they can also post messages, pictures, and classified adverts.
Register your free account today and become a member of MINI2 - MINI Forum
   
Reply
More is car insurance


Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Rate This Thread
Rate This Thread:

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
is DCS in snow bad for the engine???? flav General Discussion 13 Dec 21st, 2004 10:54 PM
Driving in Snow howardpm MINI Cooper 1 Apr 24th, 2004 07:44 AM
MINI of SF service experiences: Good or BAD? MINI guy in SF,CA Dealership Feedback 4 Nov 11th, 2003 07:20 PM
Any1 bought Mini Sport spot lamp kit?Good or Bad? bonehead General Discussion 0 Jun 7th, 2003 02:30 AM
Driving in Snow? droque General Discussion 48 Dec 7th, 2002 11:36 PM