Water, ice, snow, sand.
yes- you have better control in lower gears you can use the engine for braking and vehicle will not go into "free-wheeling" reducing the possibility of a skid
Could be a PTO (Power Take Off) to operate accessories like a dump body or a snow plow.
Snow ploughs are large vehicles used to scrape snow from roadways.Most of them are referred to in the USA as "snow plows".
Someone put snow in your glove box.
snow cat
Snow Coach
Snowmobile?
The phrase pure as the driven snow means extremely or totally pure. Shakespeare used snow as a symbol for purity. When snow first falls, driven snow, there is nothing wrong with it such as dirt, animal tracks, or leaves, which makes it pure.
Driven snow
Snow that has been moved by wind and collected into snowdrifts. Snow that has just fallen from the sky is considered to be pure and untouched, as in the phrase 'pure as driven snow'; meaning totally pure, untouched, morally chaste.
No, snow tires aren't necessary for a vehicle with 4-wheel drive. You should look at the type of terrain your vehicle will be driven on most frequency. If you live in a place where there is more snow-fall than sunshine, snow tires might be a good fit. If you live somewhere with all 4 seasons, all-weather tires might be a better fit.
A ski lift is a snow vehicle. A sleigh is a snow vehicle. A snowmobile and a snowplow are snow vehicles.
A snow vehicle with the letters kid in it is called a Skidoo
Overworking the motor will cause damage. If you try to plow more snow than what your vehicle can manage, that will damage the motor. Simply having a snowplow mounted will not.
Army Snow train
the correct phrase is pure as the driven snowIt means entirely pure.OriginThe complete phrase 'as pure as the driven snow' doesn't appear in that form in any of Shakespeare's writing, but it almost does and he used snow as a symbol for purity and whiteness in several plays. In The Winter's Tale, 1611:Autolycus: Lawn as white as driven snow.In Macbeth, 1605:Malcolm: Black Macbeth will seem as pure as snow.