MerlintheMad
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LOL! I'm glad he stopped scraping the hood. What was he thinking?Prolly be better on the ears than this!!

LOL! I'm glad he stopped scraping the hood. What was he thinking?Prolly be better on the ears than this!!
The manual is very clear about this warning: ice/snow obscuring the sensors will result in unreliability. The manual has quite a lot to say about driving the Stinger in snowy conditions. Winter is not going to be this car's preferred venue! Drive the damn car, don't expect it to stand on its bloody ear like it does with summer tires in the summer.It's not that they are inoperable, but they are not reliable/consistent when partially covered, that's why it's disabled.
If it were to still function, a piece of that ice might fall off, sudden massive increase in reflected signal, it would think a collision was imminent.
Here's an idea: If I am driving away from the protection of my carport, I will roll up some bath towels and cram them into the wiper well when I park (assuming inclement, snowy or freezing rain weather). Remove the rolled towels, voila! no ice jam; wipers underneath will be completely ice-free.
Yes, for most people, most of the time. You'd laugh to see the predicament that some cars are in. My favorite memory is from the winter of '94 (iirc, could be off by a year either way), when we had two plus feet on our front lawn, for the first time in my entire life here in the Valley. Deepest snow drop I've ever experienced. Cars on the street were completely buried; just humps of snow in the general depth. People were digging out for hours. Days later, there were still humps where cars were buried; their owners just didn't have the gumption to bother. The city came around and posted warnings to get the cars off the damned street so the plows could get them cleared. Many of those buried cars had plows go around them and fines were issued and some damage done, so I heard (did not see any myself).Down South don't have to deal with it often, but we do get some brutal cold and, so, ice from time to time. Real ice, not your pansy compacted snow everyone thinks they can drive on!
I have a heavy cover that wraps around the mirrors (and also mirror covers as well) that I put on when there's a risk of snow or ice. I wonder why these are not more prevalent to those living up North having to deal with this frequently? Just too much hassle?
The manual is very clear about this warning: ice/snow obscuring the sensors will result in unreliability. The manual has quite a lot to say about driving the Stinger in snowy conditions. Winter is not going to be this car's preferred venue! Drive the damn car, don't expect it to stand on its bloody ear like it does with summer tires in the summer.
With winter just around the corner (it's 25F this morning), I am a little bit disappointed that I don't still have my Voyager, five on the floor standard trans. I sold it too fast? Maybe so. I was actually ready to just keep it out on the street; then the kid came back with his money (having sold his skate) and I had to not disappoint him: he really wanted my van. But I know that if I still had it, I'd only be driving the Stinger when the roads are completely cleared off and dried out: the van would have been my winter DD. We don't need no stinkin' sensors in winter: we only need our eyes; and common sense.
Kinda glad my stinger is ''old school'' not having this option...as for covering mirrors.....never had to cover a mirror thats heated.
I'm thinking the Stinger is hardly alone in that. Gizmos like folding mirrors, hell, even just windshield wipers, are high risk to be destroyed by ice collecting on the car. Any visible ice formed on or around moving parts should warn the observant owner not to operate said-moving parts until the ice is removed. The manual for the Stinger has a lot to say about how extreme cold can and will affect electronics of all kinds, not just moving parts. But for the most part, I expect the Stinger to weather normal winter weather (not too extremely cold, too long, and not too much snow pack) well enough once it gets up to operating temperature. In the winter, I let my vehicles warm up for quite a while before driving, whenever I can.oh yeah good point....but the car still locks with out the mirrors folding.....I'm starting to think this car doesn't like cold ,fridgid weather....
No problems here 34 degrees Celsius today![]()
Look under B for brrrrrrrrr! LolYeah, I had to google “snow’ to see what they were talking about.
Uh-oh - I haven’t read the manual yet!
Download the PDF from Kia and read when/where convenient, on your computer or phone.