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Locked breaks

Discussion in 'General Tacoma Talk' started by BlessedTACO24, Jan 11, 2025.

  1. Jan 11, 2025 at 10:29 AM
    #1
    BlessedTACO24

    BlessedTACO24 [OP] Member

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    Hey everyone. I was driving my ‘24 Tacoma after it snowed and I was about to approach a STOP intersection and feel I have left enough space to start breaking and then all of a sudden it was like my breaks locked on me and my truck started sliding. I couldn’t do anything and felt helpless despite trying to pump the brakes. I was fortunate to not get into any accidents. People were looking at me like why isn’t this person stopping at the stop sign. I literally went through it and then eventually after a minute of not having any control, I was able to use the brakes again. Is it because it was possible black ice? Is this a response from snow? Because if it is, that’s scary and high risk of getting into an accident. I was not speeding at all. Going maybe 27-30mph... I literally am fortunate I didn’t get tboned or worse, yet alone have my kids with me. Thoughts? Still going to go to Toyota to get it checked.
     
  2. Jan 11, 2025 at 10:40 AM
    #2
    RichochetRabbit

    RichochetRabbit Bing Bing Bing

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    Rear brakes probably got snow in them, maybe a rock (hope not) ... mechanical lock. If you have a garage at home get it in, apply heat to melt out and evaporate water to prevent "rust locking".

    Do not forget that anti-lock brakes work by you holding pedal down and letting the system decide which wheel to release to manage control.
     
  3. Jan 11, 2025 at 10:47 AM
    #3
    fxntime

    fxntime Well-Known Member

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    ABS sucks badly on snow covered ice.

    It's far FAR worse then an experienced driver in a vehicle with no ABS but the knowledge to rhythm or cadence brake.
     
  4. Jan 11, 2025 at 11:04 AM
    #4
    BlessedTACO24

    BlessedTACO24 [OP] Member

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    Would it be beneficial to invest in snow tires for the truck to prevent a scare like this again?
     
  5. Jan 11, 2025 at 11:05 AM
    #5
    BlessedTACO24

    BlessedTACO24 [OP] Member

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    Just bought the truck, so I didn’t think I needed to invest in new snow tires since these tires haven’t been broken into for a while… advise?
     
  6. Jan 11, 2025 at 11:07 AM
    #6
    BlessedTACO24

    BlessedTACO24 [OP] Member

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    Thank you! Will look into that.
     
  7. Jan 11, 2025 at 11:07 AM
    #7
    BlessedTACO24

    BlessedTACO24 [OP] Member

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    Thank you!
     
  8. Jan 11, 2025 at 11:29 AM
    #8
    fxntime

    fxntime Well-Known Member

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    Yes, REAL snow tires on steelies [just swap over come winter] and a couple hundred pounds of weight above the rear axle will transform the truck completely in snow. Real made for snow tires are so much better it's unreal. Downside is that they wear very quickly on bare pavement in the off winter season as the compounds are designed for the cold and snow.
     
  9. Jan 11, 2025 at 6:59 PM
    #9
    soundman98

    soundman98 Well-Known Member

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    not enough information to make that determination.

    where are you located, how much snow are you dealing with, and what conditions?

    snow tires only work when there's snow on the road.

    in my midwest area, that means they only work while the snow is falling. the day after it's fallen, they salt the roads so heavy, i collect the extra for my driveway, and the road itself is entirely dry. which means to get the best use out of snow tires, i need to change them before the snow falls, then change back to my standard tires once the road is dry...
     
  10. Jan 12, 2025 at 6:14 PM
    #10
    BlessedTACO24

    BlessedTACO24 [OP] Member

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    In CO.
     
  11. Jan 12, 2025 at 6:19 PM
    #11
    soundman98

    soundman98 Well-Known Member

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    in colorado, i believe you can run snow tires and chains. i would if i could.
     
  12. Jan 12, 2025 at 7:44 PM
    #12
    RichochetRabbit

    RichochetRabbit Bing Bing Bing

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    About 45 years ago in Seattle you could run stud-tires in winter. Now you cannot, as far as I know.
     
  13. Jan 12, 2025 at 8:04 PM
    #13
    3JOH22A

    3JOH22A トヨタ純正男娼

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    Yes. The factory Tacoma tires are garbage except on dry pavement. Been this way for the past two decades if not longer. Every Toyota is hobbled by shitty factory tires. On this forum the factory tires get nicknamed "Rugged Fail", "Dunflop", etc.

    Were you in 4WD? The ABS calibration is slightly different in 4WD, more suited for slippery surfaces. Stopping distance is reduced by about 15% as well in 4WD just from the front and rear axles being locked together.
     

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