OLDSMOBILE BRAVADA 1994 Owners Manual
Page 111 of 248
Here  you’ll  find  information  about 
driving on different  kinds 
of roads 
and  in varying  weather  conditions 
. 
We’ve  also  included  many other 
useful  tips 
on driving . 
Part 4 
Your Driving and the Road 
Defensive  Driving .. ............................................... ................................................... 106 . .. 
Drunken  Driving ........................................................................\
............................. 106 
Control of a  Vehicle 
What 
Is All-Wheel  Drive? ........................................................................\
........... 108 
Braking ........................................................................\
......................................... 109 
Anti-Lock  Brakes  (ABS) 
........................................................................\
............. 110 
Braking  in  Emergencies 
........................................................................\
............... 111 
Steering ........................................................................\
........................................ 111 
Steering in Emergencies ........................................................................\
.............. 112 
Passing ........................................................................\
......................................... 113 
Driving  Guidelines ........................................................................\
.......................... 115 
Operating  Your  Bravada 
Off Paved  Roads ............................................................ 115 
Driving  at Night 
........................................................................\
.............................. 124 
Driving 
in the Rain ........................................................................\
.......................... 125 
City  Driving 
........................................................................\
..................................... 126 
Freeway  Driving ........................................................................\
.............................. 127 
Hill  and Mountain Roads ........................................................................\
................ 129 
Winter  Driving 
........................................................................\
................................. 130 
Towing  a  Trailer ........................................................................\
.............................. 132 
.. 
105 
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Your Driving and the Road 
106 
Dejiensive  Driving 
The best  advice  anyone can  give about 
driving  is:  Drive  defensively. 
Please  start with 
a very important safety 
device  in  your  Oldsmobile:  Buckle  up.  (See 
Safety Belts in  the Index.) 
Defensive  driving  really  means “be 
ready  for  anything.”  On city  streets, 
rural roads,  or  freeways,  it means 
“always  expect  the unexpected.” 
Assume that  pedestrians  or other 
drivers  are going  to be  careless  and 
make  mistakes.  Anticipate what  they 
might  do. Be ready  for their mistakes. 
Rear-end  collisions  are about the most 
preventable  of accidents.  Yet  they are 
common.  Allow enough  following 
distance.  It’s the best  defensive  driving 
maneuver,  in both  city and  rural 
driving.  You never  know  when  the 
vehicle  in  front of you  is going  to brake 
or  turn  suddenly. 
Drunken  Driving 
Death and injury associated  with 
drinking and  driving  is a national 
tragedy.  It’s the number one contributor 
to  the  highway  death toll,  claiming 
thousands 
of victims  every  year. 
Alcohol  takes away three things  that 
anyone needs  to drive  a vehicle: 
Judgment 
Muscular  Coordination 
Vision 
Police  records  show  that almost  half  of 
all  motor  vehicle-related  deaths involve 
alcohol 
- a driver, a  passenger  or 
someone  else, such  as a pedestrian,  had 
been  drinking.  In most cases, these 
deaths are  the result  of someone  who 
was drinking and  driving. About 
20,000 
motor vehicle-related  deaths occur each 
year  because  of alcohol,  and thousands 
of  people  are injured.  Just 
how much  alcohol  is too much 
if a 
person  plans  to drive?  Ideally, 
no one 
should drink  alcohol and then  drive. 
But  if one does, then what’s  “too 
much”? It can  be a lot  less  than many 
might  think. Although  it depends on 
each  person and situation, here  is some 
general  information  on the  problem. 
The  Blood  Alcohol  Content (BAC) of 
someone  who is  drinking  depends upon 
four things: 
How  much  alcohol is in the  drink. 
The drinker’s  body  weight. 
The amount of food  that is consumed 
before  and during  drinking. 
The length  of time  it has taken  the 
drinker  to consume  the alcohol. 
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1 
1 
I 
I 
1 r 
E 
e 
1 
1 
1 
t 
I 
I 
c 
I 
j 
i 
~~ 
Qccording to  the American  Medical 
Qssociation,  a  180-pound  (82 kg) 
?erson 
who drinks three  12-ounce (355 
nl) bottles of beer  in  an  hour  will end 
~p  with  a 
BAC of about 0.06 percent. 
The  person would reach  the same 
BAC 
)y drinking  three 4-ounce (120 ml) 
glasses of wine or  three mixed drinks if 
?ach had 1-1/2 ounces (45 ml) of a 
iquor  like  whiskey,  gin  or vodka. 
It’s  the  amount 
of alcohol  that  counts. 
?or  example, 
if the  same  person  drank 
:hree  double  martinis 
(3 ounces or 90 
nl of liquor each)  within an hour,  the 
?erson’s 
BAC would  be close  to 0.12 
sercent. 
A person  who consumes  food 
ust  before  or  during  drinking 
will have 
slightly  lower 
BAC level. 
r 
~  ~~ 
rhe  law in most U.S. states  sets  the 
legal 
lirnit at  a BAC of 0.10  percent.  In 
Canada  the 
limit is 0.08 percent,  and  in 
some  other  countries 
it’s lower  than 
that.  The 
BAC will be over 0.10 percent 
after  three  to 
six drinks (in one  hour). 
Of course,  as we’ve seen, it depends  on 
how  much  alcohol’is  in  the 
drinks, and 
how  quickly  the person drinks them.  But 
it’s very 
important  to keep in mind 
that  the  ability to drive 
is affected  well 
below 
a BAC of  0.10  percent.  Research 
shows  that  the  driving  skills 
of many 
people  are impaired  at 
a &IC 
approaching 0.05 percent, and  that  the 
effects  are worse  at night. 
All drivers  are 
impaired  at 
BAC levels  above 0.05 
percent.  Statistics show that  the chance 
of being in an accident increases sharply 
for drivers who have  a BAC of 0.05 
percent or  above. A driver with  a BAC 
level of -0.06 percent  (three  beers in  one 
hour  for a 180-pound or 
82 kg person) 
has  doubled 
his or her  chance  of having 
an  accident. 
At a BAC level of 0.10 
percent,  the  chance 
of that driver 
having 
an accident is six times  greater; 
at  a level 
of 0.15 percent,  the  chances 
are  twenty-five  times greater!  And, the 
body  takes  about  an  hour  to rid  itself 
of 
the  alcohol in one  drink. No amount of 
coffee  or number of cold showers  will 
speed  that  up. 
107 
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Your Driving and the Road 
108 
“I’ll be careful”  isn’t  the right answer. 
What 
if there’s  an emergency,  a need to 
take sudden action, as when a  child 
darts  into the  street?  A  person with a 
higher  BAC might  not be  able  to react 
quickly  enough  to avoid  the collision. 
There’s  something  else about drinking 
and  driving  that many  people  don’t 
know.  Medical  research shows  that 
alcohol  in a person’s  system can make 
crash  injuries  worse. That’s  especially 
true  for brain, spinal  cord and heart 
injuries. That means  that 
if anyone who 
has  been  drinking 
- driver  or 
passenger 
- is  in  a crash,  the chance  of 
being  killed  or  permanently disabled is 
higher  than 
if that person had not  been 
drinking.  And we’ve  already  seen that 
the  chance 
of a crash  itself is higher  for 
drinking  drivers.  You 
have  three  systems  that 
make your 
vehicle  go  where you want it 
to go. 
They  are the  brakes,  the steering and 
the  accelerator.  All three  systems  have 
to  do their work  at the  places  where  the 
tires meet  the road. 
Sometimes,  as  when you’re  driving  on 
snow  or  ice,  it’s easy  to ask more 
of 
those control  systems than  the  tires and 
road  can provide.  That means  you can 
lose  control  of your  vehicle, 
Wt Is All-Wheel Drive? 
All the Wheels, All the Time 
Bravada  has a unique  system  called  all- 
wheel  drive 
(AWD) . Simply  stated, 
AWD supplies  power  from  the engine  to 
all  four  wheels,  all  the time. It works in 
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all  conditions-both on  and off paved 
surfaces,  no matter 
if the  weather  is  fair 
or  foul. 
The  heart  of the  AWD  system  is  the 
transfer  case.  Here, engine  power  is 
divided  by  an interaxle  differential. 
Under  normal  conditions, 
it sends  65 
percent  of the  torque  to  the rear  axle  and 
the  other  35 percent  to  the front  axle. 
But  on a  slippery  surface,  a  viscous 
clutch  in the  transfer  case adjusts  the 
65/35  proportion  according to need, 
sending  more  power  to  the axle with 
traction. 
Another  feature of the  AWD  system 
that  helps  Bravada  keep  its grip  is  the 
limited-slip  rear axle.  In conditions 
where  one  rear  wheel 
loses traction  but 
the  other  still has some-as  when one 
wheel  hits  an icy  patch or  slips onto  a 
muddy  road  shoulder-this  design 
provides  power  to  the wheel  with 
traction.  And AWD  is  simple.  It’s 
always  there-working. 
Braking 
Braking  action involves perception 
time 
and reaction  time. 
First,  you have  to decide  to push  on  the 
brake  pedal.  That’s 
perception  time. 
Then you have  to bring  up your  foot 
and  do  it.  That’s 
reaction  time. 
Average reaction  time is about  3/4 of a 
second.  But that’s  only an average.  It 
might  be less  with one  driver and as 
long  as two  or three  seconds or  more 
with  another.  Age,  physical  condition, 
alertness, coordination,  and eyesight  all 
play  a  part. 
So do alcohol,  drugs  and 
frustration.  But  even in 
3/4 of a second, 
a  vehicle  moving  at 60  mph 
(100 km/h) 
travels  66 feet 
(20 m).  That  could  be  a 
lot 
of distance in  an emergency, so 
keeping  enough space  between  your 
vehicle  and  others  is important. 
And,  of course, actual stopping 
distances  vary  greatly  with the surface 
of  the  road  (whether  it’s  pavement  or 
gravel);  the condition  of the  road  (wet, 
dry,  icy); tire  tread;  and  the  condition of 
your  brakes.  Avoid  needless  heavy  braking.  Some 
people  drive  in spurts 
- heavy 
acceleration  followed  by  heavy braking 
- rather  than  keeping  pace  with traffic. 
This  is  a mistake.  Your  brakes  may  not 
have  time  to cool  between  hard stops. 
Your  brakes  will  wear  out much faster  if 
you 
do a lot  of heavy  braking.  If you 
keep  pace  with the traffic  and allow 
realistic  following  distances, you  will 
eliminate  a  lot  of unnecessary  braking. 
That  means  better braking  and longer 
brake  life. 
If  your  engine  ever  stops while  you’re 
driving,  brake  normally  but  don’t pump 
your  brakes.  If you  do,  the  pedal may 
get  harder  to push  down.  If your  engine 
stops,  you  will  still  have  some  power 
brake assist.  But  you  will use it when 
you  brake. Once  the power  assist  is 
used  up,  it  may take  longer  to stop  and 
the  brake  pedal  will  be  harder to push. 
109 
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Your Driving and the Road 
110 
SERVICE 
ENGINE 
SOON ANT’- LOCK I 
Anti-Lock  Brakes  (ABS) 
Your  vehicle has an advanced  electronic 
braking  system  that can  help  you keep 
it  under  control.  When  you  start your 
vehicle  and  begin  to drive  away,  you 
may  hear  a momentary  motor or 
clicking  noise.  This  is  the ABS  system 
testing  itself.  Here’s  how  anti-lock  works. 
Let’s say 
the  road is wet.  You’re  driving  safely. 
Suddenly  an animal  jumps  out in front 
You  slam  on  the brakes.  Here’s  what 
happens  with 
ABS. 
A computer  senses  that  the wheels  are 
slowing  down. If one  of the  wheels  is 
about  to stop  rolling,  the computer  will 
separately  work  the brakes  at each  front 
wheel  and  at  the rear  wheels.  The  anti- 
lock  system  can  change  the brake 
pressure  faster  than any  driver  could. 
The  computer  is  programmed  to make 
the  most  of available  tire  and road 
conditions.  You can  steer  around the 
obstacle  while  braking  hard. 
of 
you. 
As you brake,  your  computer  keeps 
receiving  updates on  wheel  speed  and 
controls  braking  pressure  accordingly. 
Remember:  Anti-lock  doesn’t  change 
the  time  you  need  to get  your  foot  up  to 
the  brake  pedal. 
If you  get  too close  to 
the  vehicle 
in front  of you,  you  won’t 
have  time  to apply  your  brakes  if that 
vehicle  suddenly  slows  or stops. Always 
leave  enough  room  up ahead to stop, 
even  though  you  have  anti-lock  brakes. 
To Use Four-wheel Anti-Lock 
Don’t pump  the brakes.  Just hold  the 
brake  pedal  down  and let  anti-lock 
work  for  you.  You  may  feel the brakes 
vibrate, or  you  may notice  some  noise, 
but this  is  normal. 
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Braking  in  Emergencies 
Use  your  anti-lock  braking  system when 
you  need  to. With  anti-lock,  you can 
steer  and brake  at  the  same  time.  In 
many  emergencies,  steering 
can help  you 
more  than even the very  best  braking. 
I Steering 
Power  Steering 
If you  lose  power steering  assist 
because  the engine  stops or the  system 
is  not  functioning,  you can  steer  but  it 
will  take  much  more effort. 
Steering  Tips 
Driving on Curves 
It’s  important  to take  curves  at a 
reasonable speed. 
A lot  of the  “driver lost  control” 
accidents mentioned  on  the news 
happen  on curves. Here’s  why: 
Experienced  driver  or beginner, each of 
us is subject  to  the same laws of physics 
when  driving  on curves.  The  traction  of 
the  tires  against the road surface makes 
it  possible  for  the vehicle  to change  its 
path  when  you turn  the  front wheels.  If 
there’s  no  traction,  inertia  will  keep the vehicle  going  in 
the same direction.  If 
you’ve  ever  tried to steer  a vehicle  on 
wet ice,  you’ll understand  this. 
The  traction  you can get  in 
a curve 
depends  on the  condition  of your  tires 
and  the road surface,  the angle  at which 
the  curve  is  banked,  and  your speed. 
While  you’re  in a curve,  speed  is  the  one 
factor  you can control. 
Suppose  you’re steering  through 
a 
sharp curve.  Then you suddenly 
accelerate. Both control  systems 
- 
steering and acceleration - have  to do 
their  work  where the  tires  meet the 
road. Adding  the sudden  acceleration 
can  demand  too  much  of those  places. 
You  can lose  control. 
Suppose  you’re steering  through 
a 
sharp curve.  Then you  suddenly 
accelerate. Both control  systems 
- 
steering and acceleration - have  to do 
their  work  where the  tires  meet the 
road.  Unless  you  have  traction control 
and  the  system  is  on, adding  the sudden 
acceleration  can  demand  too  much  of 
those  places. 
You can lose  control.  What 
should  you do if this  ever 
happens?  Ease up  on  the  accelerator 
pedal,  steer the vehicle  the way  you 
want  it  to go,  and  slow  down. 
Speed  limit  signs  near curves  warn  that 
you  should  adjust your speed.  Of 
course,  the posted  speeds are based  on 
good  weather  and  road conditions. 
Under less  favorable conditions  you’ll 
want  to go  slower. 
If  you  need  to reduce  your  speed  as you 
approach a curve,  do it before  you  enter 
the  curve,  while  your  front wheels  are 
straight  ahead. 
Try  to adjust  your  speed 
so you can 
“drive”  through  the  curve. Maintain a 
reasonable, steady  speed.  Wait to 
accelerate  until you are  out  of the  curve, 
and  then  accelerate  gently into the 
straightaway. 
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Your Driving and the Road 
112 
Steering in Emergencies 
There are times when  steering  can be 
more  effective  than braking.  For 
example,  you  come  over  a  hill  and find 
a  truck  stopped  in your  lane, 
or a  car 
suddenly  pulls  out from  nowhere,  or  a 
child  darts  out from  between  parked 
cars  and stops  right in front  of you. 
You 
can  avoid  these problems  by braking - 
if you can  stop  in  time.  But  sometimes 
you  can’t;  there isn’t  room.  That’s the 
time  for  evasive  action 
- steering 
around  the problem. 
Your  Oldsmobile  can perform  very  well 
in emergemies  like these.  First  apply 
your  brakes.  It is better  to remove  as 
much  speed  as 
you can from  a  possible  collision.  Then 
xeer around  the 
problem,  to  the left  or  right  depending 
on the space  available. 
An  emergency  like  this requires  close 
attention  and 
a quick  decision.  If you 
are  holding  the steering  wheel  at  the 
recommended 
9 and 3 o’clock  positions, 
you  can turn  it a 
full 180 degrees  very 
quickly  without  removing  either  hand. 
But you  have to act fast,  steer  quickly, 
and  just  as quickly  straighten  the wheel 
once 
you have  avoided  the object. 
The  fact that  such  emergency  situations 
are  always  possible  is 
a good  reason to 
practice  defensive  driving  at all  times 
and  wear  safety  belts  properly. 
, IOFF ROAD RECOVERY / 
Off-Road  Recovery 
You may  find  sometime  that your  right 
wheels  have  dropped  off the  edge  of a 
road  onto  the  shoulder  while  you’re 
driving. 
If the  level  of the  shoulder  is  only 
slightly  below  the pavement,  recovery 
should  be  fairly  easy.  Ease 
off the 
accelerator  and  then, if there  is nothing 
in  the  way,  steer 
so that your  vehicle 
straddles  the edge  of the  pavement. 
You 
can  turn  the  steering  wheel  up  to 1/4 
turn until  the right  front tire contacts 
the  pavement  edge.  Then turn your 
steering  wheel  to 
go straight  down the 
roadway. 
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Passing 
The driver  of a vehicle  about to pass 
another  on  a  two-lane highway waits for 
just  the  right moment, accelerates, 
moves  around  the  vehicle ahead,  then 
goes  back  into  the right lane again. 
A 
simple  maneuver? 
Not  necessarily!  Passing another  vehicle 
on  a  two-lane  highway is a potentially 
dangerous  move, since the passing 
vehicle  occupies  the same  lane  as 
oncoming  traffic for several  seconds. 
A 
miscalculation,  an error  in  judgment,  or 
a  brief  surrender  to  frustration  or anger 
can  suddenly  put  the passing  driver  face 
to  face  with  the  worst  of all  traffic 
accidents 
- the  head-on  collision. 
So here  are  some tips for  passing: 
“Drive  ahead.”  Look down  the  road, 
to  the  sides, and  to crossroads  for 
situations  that might  affect  your 
passing  patterns.  If you  have  any 
doubt whatsoever  about making  a 
successful  pass,  wait for a  better  time. 
markings,  and lines.  If you  can see a 
sign  up  ahead  that might  indicate  a 
turn  or an  intersection,  delay  your 
Watch for traffic  signs,  pavement  pass. 
A broken 
center line usually 
indicates  it’s all right  to pass 
(providing  the road ahead 
is clear). 
Never  cross a solid  line on your  side 
of  the  lane  or a double  solid line, even 
if  the  road  seems  empty  of 
approaching  traffic. 
Do not get too  close  to  the  vehicle  you 
want  to pass  while  you’re  awaiting  an 
opportunity.  For one thing,  following 
too closely reduces  your area of vision, 
especially 
if you’re  following  a larger 
vehicle. 
Also, you  won’t  have 
adequate  space 
if the vehicle  ahead 
suddenly  slows  or stops.  Keep  back  a 
reasonable distance. 
When  it looks  like  a chance  to pass  is 
coming  up,  start  to  accelerate but stay 
in  the  right  lane  and  don’t  get  too close. 
Time  your  move 
so you will be 
increasing  speed  as  the time  comes  to 
move  into  the  other lane. If the  way  is 
clear  to pass,  you 
will have a “running 
start”  that  more than makes  up for  the 
distance  you  would  lose  by  dropping 
back.  And 
if something  happens  to 
cause  you to cancel  your  pass,  you  need 
only  slow  down  and drop  back  again 
and  wait  for  another opportunity. 
If other  cars are lined  up to pass  a 
slow  vehicle,  wait  your  turn. But take 
care  that.someone  isn’t trying  to pass 
you  as you  pull  out  to pass the slow 
vehicle.  Remember  to glance  over  your 
shoulder and  check the blind  spot. 
Check  your  mirrors, glance  over  your 
shoulder,  and  start your  left lane 
change  signal  before  moving  out of the 
right  lane to pass.  When  you  are far 
enough  ahead of the  passed  vehicle  to 
see  its front  in  your  inside  mirror, 
activate  your  right  lane change  signal 
and  move  back  into  the right lane. 
(Remember  that your  right  outside 
mirror  is  convex.  The vehicle  you  just 
passed  may  seem  to be  farther  away 
from 
you than it really  is.) 
Try not  to pass  more  than one  vehicle 
at  a  time  on two-lane  roads.  Reconsider 
before  passing  the next  vehicle. 
Don’t  overtake  a slowly  moving 
vehicle 
too rapidly.  Even  though  the 
brake lights  are  not flashing,  it may  be 
slowing  down or starting  to  turn. 
If you’re  being  passed, make it easy 
for  the  following  driver  to get  ahead  of 
you.  Perhaps  you can ease  a little  to 
the  right. 
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hur Driving and the Road 
114 
Loss of Control 
Let’s  review what driving  experts  say 
about what happens  when  the three 
control  systems  (brakes, steering and 
acceleration) don’t  have enough  friction 
where  the tires meet  the road  to do 
what  the driver  has asked. 
In  any  emergency,  don’t give up. Keep 
trying  to steer  and constantly  seek an 
escape route or area  of less  danger. 
Skidding 
In  a  skid,  a  driver  can lose control  of 
the  vehicle.  Defensive  drivers  avoid 
most  skids by taking  reasonable  care 
suited  to existing  conditions, and  by not 
“overdriving”  those conditions.  But 
skids  are always  possible. 
The three  types of skids  correspond  to 
your  Oldsmobile’s  three control 
systems.  In the  braking  skid  your 
wheels  aren’t rolling.  In  the steering  or 
cornering skid, too much  speed  or 
steering in  a  curve  causes  tires to slip 
and  lose  cornering  force. And in the 
acceleration  skid too much  throttle 
causes  the driving  wheels  to spin.  A cornering 
skid and an acceleration 
skid  are best  handled  by easing  your 
foot 
off the  accelerator  pedal. 
If your  vehicle  starts  to slide, ease your 
foot 
off the  accelerator  pedal and 
quickly  steer the way  you  want the 
vehicle  to go.  If you  start  steering 
quicldy  enough,  your  vehicle  may 
straighten  out. Always  be  ready  for a 
second  skid  if it  occurs. 
Of  course,  traction  is  reduced  when 
water,  snow,  ice,  gravel,  or  other  material  is  on  the road.  For  safety,  you’ll  want to 
slow  down  and adjust  your  driving  to 
these  conditions.  It  is  important  to slow 
down  on  slippery  surfaces  because  stopping  distance  will  be  longer  and 
vehicle  control  more  limited.  While  driving 
on a  surface  with  reduced 
traction,  try  your  best  to avoid  sudden 
steering,  acceleration,  or  braking  (including  engine  braking  by shifting  to a 
lower  gear).  Any  sudden  changes  could 
cause  the tires  to slide. You may  not 
realize  the surface  is  slippery  until  your 
vehicle  is  skidding.  Learn  to recognize 
warning  clues 
- such  as enough  water, 
ice  or  packed  snow  on the  road  to make 
a  “mirrored  surface” 
- and  slow  down 
when  you  have  any  doubt. 
Remember:  Any  anti-lock  braking 
system  (ABS) helps  avoid  only  the 
braking  skid. 
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