jesse
Touchdown! Greaser!
I really can't remember what diff it had. It did not have traction control. It was optional, probably more common on the Grand Marquis.Did that have an open differential or some breed of limited slip? I would think limited slip would be worse than the open diff + traction control.
You grew up on a farm running all kinds of equipment of different types plus have driven rear wheel drive pickups. Very different than a 16 year old city kid that hasn't ran anything except a bicycle a decade ago.All good points and was a concern of mine as well. My winter experience has been positive, all I have ever driven here is front wheel drive sedans till I bought these. My short 10-mile commute is mostly flat and mostly strait roads. If I can get out of parking lots I can get across town.
If I had a hospital job such as ER dr, ER nurse or lived in areas with hilly terrain driving weird hours of the day through lots of snowstorms I'd get something else for winter.
Crown Vic definitely is not easily stopped by snow, but, at the end of the day is a RWD drive car. Only a matter of time till it gets exciting on a 16 year old up north, best to do that with Dad in the other seat in a parking lot.I wasn't stuck in these pictures but it seemed close. (again non-studded snow tires on all 4). The owners manual for these tells you to use 2nd gear if 1st is making wheels spin too easy. The traction control just about eliminates rear end fishtail/spinout.
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I do love the cars and would happily buy another should the opportunity (and need for it) present itself. It really brought back memories of doing ride alongs with my step-dad when I was a teenager (he was a deputy).