Want this question answered?
When driving in adverse conditions, clean the snow off of your car before you begin driving. Defrost the front and back windshields.
In clear weather conditions, 2 seconds.
2 second
A 'Weather front'. A Warm front is changing the weather from cool dry conditions to warmer wet conditions., (higher humidity). A cold front is changing the weather from warmer wet conditions , to drier cooler conditions. (lower humidity , but with showers). An Occluded front is when warm air is pushed into the upper atmosphere, but will often bring rain.
this is actually a distance just like a light year is a distance. when driving spot the car in front in relation to a stationary object you should pass this same spot in 4 seconds. of course this should be increased according to road and weather conditions. i guess if your brakes are worn you should also increase the time.
cold air mass & clearing conditions.
this is actually a distance just like a light year is a distance. when driving spot the car in front in relation to a stationary object you should pass this same spot in 4 seconds. of course this should be increased according to road and weather conditions. i guess if your brakes are worn you should also increase the time.
Under these conditions the cold front will probably bring thunderstorms.
You shouldn't drive close at all in poor driving conditions. Give yourself plenty of space between you and the car in front of you and slow down.
The weather associated with a stationary front is similar to that produced by a warm front. And a warm front generally brings drizzly precipitation. :)
cloudy conditions and abundant precipitation
500feet of an approaching car within 300 feet of a car in front of you when driving on lighted roads when driving in bad weather