50%
50%
The danger of reduced traction is greatest when it first starts raining. This is because there is oil on the road and the rain turns the oil spots into slippery areas. Wet road surfaces due to rain and snow can cause reduced traction as can sleet.
You will not have as much traction.
It notifies the driver that the road conditions are creating reduced friction between the tyres and road surface, hence, reduced traction. You'll see it on particularly wet roads, snow/ice covered roads, etc.
Michelin mud and snow tires get great traction, but if you want the best traction go with studded tires.
Melted snow is water. Water, because it is a liquid, is hard to weigh as you normally only weigh solids. Liquids would have to be measured litres or gallons. So the answer to that question would depend on how much snow had actually melted- eg. 12% ice and 78 % is water and 10% is debris caught in the snow as it fell
Snow
6 inches would be about .6 inches of water when melted usually 1 inch of rain = 10 inches of snow
I don't know of anything that gets better traction on ice than snow.
I assume that melted snow is water, just purified through the water cycle and unpurified by being on the ground. To answer your question, you would have to drink melted snow.
No.
Rains and melted snow from northern araes
When there is ice or snow on the road