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Old 06-30-2009, 03:04 PM   #1
cartagena
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Absolute WORSE Driving Experience of my life!

Last night I had the worse driving experience of my life. I was driving down the mountain and it started raining so much there was ZERO and I mean ZERO visibility. It was like a fireman hitting the windshield directly with his hose. It was too dark to stop the car and there are no curbs so I would have risked hitting a tree if I stopped or falling thousands of feet to my death had I went too far. Plus since the curbs are so small (or non-existent) someone surely would have plowed me. There were 2 deaths on this road last night. The only choice was to follow the faint lights of the car in front of me and hope they did not drive off the mountain. I was in the middle of a line of about 15 cars all going about 40km. THEN, (ya it gets worse) the window fogs up and I just cannot find the heater controls. This is a road that turns radically left and right every few seconds so complete concentration is needed which made looking down to find the heater control impossible because one small slip and it is goodbye. So I am driving with one hand, blinded by the rain, and rubbing the window with the other hand for like 10 minutes. Finally I was able to get the heater on, and guess what, well, since I have never actually used the heater before it blew all this crap all over the windshield. I have no towels in the car so I am trying to take off my tshirt but that proved impossible. For a while I was looking only through a hole that was about 3 inches. Finally the rain lets up a little and in about 15 more minutes there was a pay booth where I could pull over to relax.

I like driving fast, I have jumped out of airplanes and bungee jumped so it is not like I do not like a little adrenalin. But I doubt I have been more stressed out while driving in all my life. I once hit black ice going 130km and went head first into a concrete wall destroying a Lincoln Continental. My reaction was to get out and kick the door while cursing the government. But last night there was a time I actually started shaking I was so stressed. I had to calm myself down by taking deep breaths because the hand shaking certainly was not helping anything.

I am absolutely never driving down that road again at night time. There is a more modern highway with curbs but it takes a little longer so that is what I will be using from now on at night. That amount of rain is unusual but I do see it about 2-3 times a year here.

I also own a bullet proof Toyota Land Cruiser. That thing is a tank. I probably would have risked pulling it over in complete darkness and maybe hitting a tree had I been driving it instead of the Porsche.

I had been up the mountain on a date with a girl 17 years younger than me and she is in medical school. I finally had just got the first kiss out of her! :dance: So it is all about BALANCE! Weird things happen to me all the time because I live here but the balance of it all makes it worth it!!

Last edited by cartagena; 06-30-2009 at 03:15 PM.
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Old 06-30-2009, 03:12 PM   #2
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One thing I forgot to write. The road has reflectors on both sides and the center line. But the rain was so intense it was almost impossible to see them the majority of the time. The other cars were probably driving completely blind as well but were able to see the reflectors since there windows had not completely fogged up.

There were a couple times when the car in front of me went over a hill top and I lost the guiding light. When this happened I was completely blind for a few seconds. I would then put the tire over the path of the center reflector and listen for the sound as guidance. The feeling of driving like that JUST FREAKED ME OUT. But the girl is nice.

Last edited by cartagena; 06-30-2009 at 03:16 PM.
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Old 06-30-2009, 03:39 PM   #3
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Glad to hear you made it through fine. I've experienced some moments myself....after you get through them the air feels and smalls crisper, the sky is bluer and so on. Too bad the feelings fade after awhile.
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Old 06-30-2009, 04:15 PM   #4
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Actually I am still a little bit freaked out. Talking about it with Johnnie Walker was very helpful when I finally got home.


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Originally Posted by coreseller
Glad to hear you made it through fine. I've experienced some moments myself....after you get through them the air feels and smalls crisper, the sky is bluer and so on. Too bad the feelings fade after awhile.
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Old 06-30-2009, 03:54 PM   #5
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We used to get rain like that from time to time when I lived in Kansas. I used to commute on weekends between Manhattan (where Kansas State University is) and Kansas City (where I worked weekdays), taking I-70, and I got nailed by storms like that a few times.

Generally every one had the sense to keep moving at a safe rate of speed (maybe 30 MPH). One time, though, some morons decided to stop under an overpass, side by side, IN THE MIDDLE OF THE INTERSTATE. It's a miracle we didn't have a massive pile-up, but somehow it never happened. (They started moving before long---one of the first vehicles that had to stop for them was this trucker who was really PO'd, and started laying on his airhorn. They got the message.)

One time that was even scarier, though it only lasted maybe 10 seconds, was when I passed a semi, with trailer, right after we had a tremendous downpour. There was a lot of water still on the road, here and there. I got part way through passing this trucker when he hit a huge amount of standing water, sending this tidal wave across my windshield. Visibility could not have been worse if someone had painted my windshield black. I gritted my teeth and completed the pass, totally blind. Not a real fun experience.
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Old 06-30-2009, 05:02 PM   #6
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Yea, it's pretty scary to be in low visibility conditions. One time in the hills of northern California my family was driving around 1 AM when it got extremely foggy. Our little Toyota Camry didn't have excellent fog lights and the visibility was extremely low. Also, because it was 1 AM there were no cars on the road at all (this wasn't an interstate, it was a small highway). Thankfully we got out of the mountains soon and found a small town.
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Old 06-30-2009, 08:48 PM   #7
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At least you got a chance to use your rear fog light... you did turn on your rear fog light didn't you?

Glad you made it safely home, and next time instead of trying to get your shirt off to wipte the windshield, have her take her shirt off... all for the cause of course

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Old 07-02-2009, 02:02 AM   #8
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I feel for you cartagena. I had the same thing with when I went on vacation once with a couple of young lady friends. For 10 - 15 minutes, it was sheer horror as I couldn't see a thing. Torrential rain. Rental car. Tried high beams, windshield wipers at high speed. Couldn't see a thing.

I was too afraid to pull over as I couldn't see the side of the road and I didn't want to risk getting rear-ended by a semi.

Speaking of semis, I don't know how they did it. Maybe they were reckless. Maybe they were experienced in driving in torrential rain. Maybe the fact that they were higher up helped with the visibility. But THEY WERE WHIZZING BY ME AT FULL SPEED, freaking the hell out of me.

I was flipped out for a while that night. Like cartagena, I am not necessarily perturbed that easily. I have done some wild things in cars that I won't talk about in a public forum. But this was easily the most scary.

They lady friends? They didn't even notice anything was out of the ordinary. They were sitting quietly or chatting idly while I was white-knuckling it.
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Old 07-02-2009, 03:29 AM   #9
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Cartagena, we need pictures. Without pictures, there is no proof this actually happened!

Next time turn on your AC...not your heater.
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Old 07-02-2009, 03:45 AM   #10
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Just Strange

Not the most dangerous, but the strangest event I've encountered while driving. One cool morning I left Austin heading south to San Antonio on I35. All the windows were rolled up and the AC was not on. Apparently I drove through a warm front about twenty miles down the road. I was cruising at about 75 with little or no traffic. Apparently I crossed into a warm (humid) front because every window instantly and completely fogged up. I was suddenly blind at 75mph. The highway was straight so I was able to pull the car over and wait for the AC to clear the windows. I understand the chemistry involved, but that doesn't help when you're in the middle of it all.
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Old 07-03-2009, 08:39 PM   #11
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Quote:
Originally Posted by bmussatti
Next time turn on your AC...not your heater.
An even better solution is to push your defrost button, it will clear the windsheild in about 20 seconds automatically.
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