As long as your not making slow speed corners on dry pavement you can use 4hi any time you want.
People, we have a dash mounted electronic switch, you can switch in and out of 4x4 in a second. I will run it when on the snow and if I hit a dry cleared road just click the switch.
I agree, don't let it fool you into being invincible. Keep the speeds down on snow! Once I let my speed creep up as I was talking to my GF next me while driving on a snow covered mountain 2 lane road (trees on both sides) while driving a friends truck with total street tires.
Then I look ahead and its a downhill with a left turn coming up. I look at the spedo and I'm going 50. I touch the brakes and its solid ice, the kind that makes you feel as though hitting the brakes actually makes you go faster. Luckily I had time to think about it, I slowly merged over to the left and crossed the center line to get as far to the left as possible and purposely put the truck into a drift, staying as close to the left side of the road as possible. Once I got the truck totally sideways I floored the accelerator to help pull me left and stay on the road and not slide off into the trees on the right. Worked perfectly. Truck stopped facing the opposite direction of when I started. Had to stop for a second after that one. It was close. Studded tires would have been nice in that situation.
--John
People, we have a dash mounted electronic switch, you can switch in and out of 4x4 in a second. I will run it when on the snow and if I hit a dry cleared road just click the switch.
I agree, don't let it fool you into being invincible. Keep the speeds down on snow! Once I let my speed creep up as I was talking to my GF next me while driving on a snow covered mountain 2 lane road (trees on both sides) while driving a friends truck with total street tires.
Then I look ahead and its a downhill with a left turn coming up. I look at the spedo and I'm going 50. I touch the brakes and its solid ice, the kind that makes you feel as though hitting the brakes actually makes you go faster. Luckily I had time to think about it, I slowly merged over to the left and crossed the center line to get as far to the left as possible and purposely put the truck into a drift, staying as close to the left side of the road as possible. Once I got the truck totally sideways I floored the accelerator to help pull me left and stay on the road and not slide off into the trees on the right. Worked perfectly. Truck stopped facing the opposite direction of when I started. Had to stop for a second after that one. It was close. Studded tires would have been nice in that situation.
--John