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dave-m

Edge Member
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Posts posted by dave-m

  1. Dave M - you dont say where you are but given the snow days you note I would likely do the same thing. Our company is extremely big on safety and had no qualms about paying for snow tires. The internal headaches from even a minor fender bender outweigh the cost of the tires alone !

     

    That said I am still surprised at just how poor the OEM all seasons are. Our Honda van with Michelin all season and 65,000 km on them out performed the Edge all seasons with only 1000 km on them.

     

    Based on some of the other posts maybe AWD makes a big difference also but bottom line is everything is based on the quality of the rubber meeting the road.

     

    I'm in Vancouver BC, Canada.

     

    Oh and I should have mentioned...mine is AWD. You're right, the rubber makes the difference.

  2. The main reason I put the snows on it was I went around a corner with about an inch of snow/slush on the road and the all seasons lost traction and the car just plowed straight ahead instead of turning. Absolutely the worst performing tires in snow I have ever driven on.

     

    The same thing happened to me on the 18's and Conti tires. I was quite surprised and it made me alot more cautious driving in slippery conditions. I was going quite slow at the time too.

     

    I've given some thought about snow tires, but we really only get about a half dozen days of snow a year around here, so I'll probably just be more careful in those conditions.

  3. Glad to see another happy Edge owner. I was wondering though how big is the trailer you towed with the Edge? My wife and I have thought about using our for some light towing, but we always end up using my truck. The stopping distance under hard braking is a bit far. It seems that it would be much worse with a trailer, especially one with no brakes.

     

    Is your opinion of the stopping distance based on "seat of the pants" experience or from something you read?

     

    I read the reviews, noted the comments about long braking distance. When I test drove it we tested the braking under panic conditions on a deserted road. Smooth controlled braking, brought the Edge down from a good speed in a predictable manner with no fuss. I didn't feel it had a long braking distance at all.

     

    Too many people get hung up on "how it looks on paper"

     

    Stopping distance is more defined by your reaction time and awareness of your surroundings than a statistic on a website that was determined by a professional driver in a controlled environment.

  4. I don't have any!

     

    I'm not anticipating any, I'm not listening for every squeek and rattle and I'm not searching the internet forums looking for problems that someone else might have and wondering if I have them too.

     

    I'm enjoying my new vehicle :rockon:

     

    Seems a few people around here should do the same!

     

    Internet forums tend to bring out the worst. All you hear are the problems and you think it's an epidemic. Of course there will be problems, that's why there's a warranty.

     

    Not too many people post up that their car is great and there's nothing wrong.

     

    So I just did.

     

    PS. Take that manual in the glovebox and read it cover to cover. It will allow you to spend more time enjoying your car and less time searching on the internet.

  5. Have any of you noticed any blind spots while driving your Ford Edge?

     

    Drooling and waiting patiently in MD. :ohsnap:

     

    My wife has commented that she she sees a blind spot in A pillar/side mirror area. I didn't notice it, but I'm a bit taller. It's probably just a matter of getting comfortable with a new car as we've only had it a couple of days.

  6. UPDATE #2: The following is a description of the 'bulbs' I installed....definitely not HID, but as close as you can get according to the manufacturer....

     

    "The blue top coat on these bulbs add a slight blue tint to the lamp while still providing outstanding performance. PIAA offers the 9000 Series Xtreme White Plus in four distinct types – 9004, 9005, 9006 and 9007. Manufactured to SAE recommended specifications and DOT compliant."

     

    "60w = 120w, 4000K"

     

    These bulb are way better than the OEM bulbs without the need for a HID ballast.

     

    - Paul

     

     

    The blue tint thing is about the biggest sales pitch there is.

     

    It's marketted towards people that want their car to look like it came with expensive headlamps.

     

    The blue coating on a non HID lamp actually reduces it's lumen output, and blue is one of the least visable colours in the spectrum. It also causes problems with glare towards oncoming drivers. They are also illegal in a lot of areas, not because they are too bright but because they are dangerous. You may think they are better, but you actually just spent a bunch of money and got poorer lamps.

     

    HID lamps emit a blue color as a byproduct of igniting the gas in the lamp. The lamp technology provides a more intense output per watt, not the blue tint. It's not a lamp change. HID systems require a lamp and ballast kit and generally use completely different reflector design in the lamp housing itself. Basically, if you want HID lamps, but a vehicle that comes with them, or buy the complete lamp housing assembly. Anything else is just window dressing.

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