Apply the brakes immediately and swing the back onto the pavement quickly
4x4 auto position for normal street / highway driving
Off of the pavement
ONLY when there's a wide shoulder or a parking lot, and the highway is straight and not near a curve straight ahead.
Test driving a vehicle with the salesperson in the vehicle. They should put a dealers tag on the vehicle before you left the lot. It will fall into the dealerships insurance policy.
Slow down but proceed forward and slowly steer back on to the pavement.
Depends on vehicle, engine, and driving habits The 2.3L is rated at 21 city and 28 highway
2 high, is 2 wheel drive which is where you should be when driving on the highway.2 high, is 2 wheel drive which is where you should be when driving on the highway.
It depends on the driver's braking habits and type of driving, be it city or highway driving. They can last between 25K or less of city driving to 75K or more of highway driving.
Apart from the fact that a vehicle of that mass should not be on the pavement in the first place and that fact that pounds is a measure opf mass - not weight - the answer will depend on the pavement surface, quality of the brakes on the vehicle, the depth of water (aquaplaning/skidding risk).
Highway code says you should walk as near to the side as possible, facing oncoming traffic. If there is a pavement or path, walk on that.
20
Alot depends on mileage of the engine and condition of vehicle. A low mileage engine should get between 13 and 16 mpg, and this also depends on driving habits, town or highway driving. You might squeze 16 on the highway driving the speed limit. Driving just 5 over the limit will greatly decrease you mileage.