For the first 500 miles.. Do not drive at one constant speed, vary speeds, as in traffic. Do not go over 68 mph. Do not use your cruise control, and do not make any full throttle starts.
For the first 1000 miles use only moderate acceleration, and keep below 68 mph.
After the first 600 miles until 3000 miles, only briefly, (less than 5 min at a time) you may exceed the 68 mph limit.
After that the vehicle is "broken in", and will function at its maximum potential, mpg. hp, and torque!
If this is the first trip, be very conscious not to push the vehicle hard and to drive as instructed.
Yes, you can drive a car on the highway with a broken window, assuming parts of the window aren't still falling off.
It's broken.
The drive shaft falls into the street. Before that the car shakes.
The most logical route from Sydney to Orange is out along the Great Western Highway, to the Western Motorway, before rejoining the Great Western Highway. Then turn in to the Mid Western Highway before exiting on to the Mitchell highway. This will take you to Orange, a journey of about 254km, and 3hours 45 mins.
Ofcourse you can, you can drive any car in the highway. It's a car.
Ofcourse you can, you can drive any car in the highway. It's a car.
can a person temporarily drive a tractor on a highway with a driver license
it is where you drive in the highway
May you drive on the of the highway to pass a vehicle which is near the top of a grade or on a blind curve
At highway speeds, YES!
Certainly. It's been done for years before overdrive became a thing... it just means you'll turn higher RPMs at speed, and you'll want to drive slower if you're conscious about fuel consumption. I had no problems when I took my 87 Silverado with a Muncie 465 direct drive transmission on the highway.
Highway # 17, the Trans Canada Highway. Is about a five hour drive.