It would depend on the weight of the vehicle, the vehicle's tires and the amount of water on the road.
hydroplaning
You may have worn tires. You may be going to fast and hit a thin layer of water and do what is called "plainning'. Kind of like a flat rock skimming across water. it means the tires are hydroplaning for the above reasons
parties partial
Amphibious_vehicleAmphibious Vehicle
Aircraft
Audi
When it is raining, the chances of hydroplaning are higher. You see, the cruise control makes every attempt to maintain a set speed. When hydroplaning occurs, the tires lose traction, and as such the car starts to slow down, then the cruise control kicks in suddenly trying to accelerate the car back to the set speed. The cruise control does not know the road conditions or if it is raining, snowing or you are floating on a lake ... it only knows the speed set point and will always do everything it can to achieve that set speed, no matter what. Best advice when it's raining - turn the cruise control off.
n Ambulance
Austin Healey
A vehicle is a machine.
Here is a partial list:Each item on the partial list can be written as [ 1.6xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx times 10xx ],where each 'x' is any digit you want, 0 to 9.
· Alfa Romeo