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GM Owner Manuals - Buick

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While driving on a surface with reduced traction, try<br />

your best to avoid sudden steering, acceleration, or<br />

braking, including reducing vehicle speed by shifting<br />

to a lower gear. Any sudden changes could cause the<br />

tires to slide. You may not realize the surface is slippery<br />

until the vehicle is skidding. Learn to recognize warning<br />

clues — such as enough water, ice, or packed snow on<br />

the road to make a mirrored surface — and slow down<br />

when you have any doubt.<br />

Remember: Any Antilock Brake System (ABS) helps<br />

avoid only the braking skid.<br />

Driving at Night<br />

Night driving is more dangerous than day driving<br />

because some drivers are likely to be impaired — by<br />

alcohol or drugs, with night vision problems, or by<br />

fatigue.<br />

Night driving tips include:<br />

• Drive defensively.<br />

• Do not drink and drive.<br />

• Reduce headlamp glare by adjusting the inside<br />

rearview mirror.<br />

• Slow down and keep more space between you and<br />

other vehicles because headlamps can only light up<br />

so much road ahead.<br />

• Watch for animals.<br />

• When tired, pull off the road.<br />

• Do not wear sunglasses.<br />

• Avoid staring directly into approaching headlamps.<br />

• Keep the windshield and all glass on your vehicle<br />

clean — inside and out.<br />

• Keep your eyes moving, especially during turns or<br />

curves.<br />

No one can see as well at night as in the daytime. But,<br />

as we get older, these differences increase. A<br />

50-year-old driver might need at least twice as much<br />

light to see the same thing at night as a 20-year-old.<br />

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