Driving safely in wet fall weather
(WWLP) — Autumn is moving through the Capital Region, meaning rain, mist, and leaves fall across the area's roadways. These seasonal elements can create difficult driving conditions, between visibility and traction.
The stopping distance on a dry road is drastically different from the stopping distance on a wet road with leaves, so let's break it down. If you are driving at an average speed of 40 miles per hour, it will take your car 80 feet to come to a complete stop.
If you keep that same speed, it will take you double the distance to stop on a wet road and if that wet road has wet leaves on it, it will take even longer to stop. It would take you 250 feet to come to a complete stop. If you are going any faster than 40 miles per hour, it will likely take you a longer distance to come to a stop.
More from NEWS10:
- Police admit to mistaking Roberta Laundrie for Brian Laundrie during week he disappeared
- Breaking down the statewide proposals on the 2021 General Election ballot
- Two months after US withdrawal, some 300 Americans still in Afghanistan
- Sentence reinstated for man charged with stabbing as teenager
- Trucking company exec to plead guilty in fatal biker crash