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Firstly glad to hear you are ok. Scary story indeed!As a recovering motorcyclist (owned 32 over a 12 year period earlier in life I am glad the bikes were missed. I would love to see some pics of those once all gets back to normal. Be safe. Spin the tunes!
You talked me into it, I'm never buying a Volt, they sound treacherous!
What were you doing underground?
Sorry to hear about your mishap, but I'm glad that you came out of it unscathed - aside from your feelings perhaps. Material things are replaceable, so in the grand scheme of things all is, or will be good again. Not knowing your particular situation and conditions ie. steepness of grade, attitude of the car etc., I'm sure the low rolling resistance tires on the Volt didn't help the situation (i'm assuming the stock tires were on the car). I think that winter ice & snow tires are very important for cars in the northern climates. I am not saying for certain that if you had dedicated winter tires on the car this wouldn't have happened - of course no one can know that. What I am trying to convey is that the difference between all-weather and winter tires in sh*ty conditions is usually quite large.I'm in the Northeast US and wear dedicated winter tires from November to March. IMO this is a must. I would rather drive a RWD car with winter tires in ice/snow conditions, than an AWD SUV with all-weather rubber.Looks like you got a cool job. Out of curiosity, how deep underground are those data centers built?
And now the left field question. What was the boat/motor? I used to be in the boat biz, but don't own a boat anymore. If I lived on a lake though, that'd have to change!
Peter,It is a 20' Tracker TX 190 with a 90 HP (gas sipper) Merc.