Extreme weather presents complex challenges for fleet operations, often affecting vehicles, roadways, and schedules simultaneously. While common guidance focuses on preparedness, such as vehicle inspections and speed reduction, many risks associated with extreme conditions are less visible and not always well understood.
Conditions like ice, freezing rain, snow, and extreme heat can subtly alter vehicle performance. Steering response may feel different, braking distances can change unexpectedly, and traction can vary dramatically within short distances or along familiar routes. These changes are not always intuitive and may not be immediately apparent to even experienced drivers.
Ice ≠ Snow: Why Surface Conditions Matter More Than Temperature
Ice can cause an immediate loss of traction with little warning, especially on bridges, overpasses, shaded areas, and untreated secondary roads.
Unlike snow, ice is often transparent. Pavement may appear wet or clear while offering little to no grip.
Drivers may not feel reduced traction until braking or turning is required, limiting the ability to make corrective adjustments.
A route may alternate between dry pavement, packed snow, and ice within the same mile, increasing the need for early speed and spacing adjustments.
Ice can form near or above freezing due to refreezing meltwater, wind exposure, or overnight temperature swings.
On ice, braking effectiveness can vary significantly, even at low speeds, increasing the likelihood of intersection and rear-end incidents.
ABS, traction control, and stability systems rely on available grip; on ice, their ability to assist is reduced.
The Illusion of Control: Why Freezing Rain Is So Dangerous
Freezing rain creates a smooth glaze of ice that offers significantly less traction than snow or sleet, often approaching zero grip.
Pavement may look damp rather than icy, providing little visual indication of the actual surface condition.
At steady speeds, vehicles may track straight, creating a false sense of control that disappears during braking, turning, or lane changes.
Even light braking can result in extended stopping distances, making intersections, ramps, and downhill grades particularly hazardous.
On a glazed surface, steering corrections may not register, reducing the driver’s ability to recover once traction is lost.
ABS, traction control, and stability control depend on some level of friction; freezing rain can exceed their functional limits.
Freezing rain can develop rapidly, sometimes outpacing weather alerts and leaving little time for reactive adjustments.
Because corrective driving inputs are limited, delaying departures, modifying routes, or suspending operations often provides the greatest risk reduction.
Heat as a Silent Risk: How Extreme Temperatures Affect Vehicles and Drivers
Tire pressure increases with temperature: Rising heat can elevate tire pressure beyond optimal levels, increasing the risk of reduced traction, uneven wear, or blowouts, especially during sustained highway driving.
Braking systems experience thermal stress: High temperatures can reduce braking efficiency, particularly during frequent stops, downhill grades, or heavy-load operations.
Vehicle cooling systems are pushed to their limits: Radiators, hoses, belts, and fluids are more likely to fail under prolonged heat exposure, often without immediate warning signs.
Cabin heat contributes to driver fatigue: Even with air conditioning, extended exposure to high temperatures can increase fatigue, slow reaction times, and reduce concentration.
Heat accelerates vehicle wear: Fluids degrade faster, batteries are stressed, and rubber components deteriorate more quickly in extreme temperatures.
Breakdowns create secondary safety risks: Disabled vehicles on roadways during extreme heat expose drivers to traffic hazards and heat-related health concerns.
Risk accumulates over time, not instantly: Unlike ice or freezing rain, heat-related risks build gradually, making proactive planning and monitoring essential.
Why Tire Pressure Matters in Both Cold and Heat Extremes
Tire pressure is one of the few vehicle factors that is directly influenced by temperature, and one of the most commonly misunderstood. While underinflation is often associated with winter driving and overinflation with summer heat, both conditions can occur year-round depending on temperature swings, vehicle load, and driving duration. Understanding how temperature affects tire pressure helps fleets and drivers reduce risk before performance is compromised.
Cold Weather and Tire Pressure
Tire pressure typically drops about 1 PSI for every 10°F decrease in ambient temperature.
Low pressure increases tire flex, reduces steering responsiveness, and can extend braking distances on cold or slick surfaces.
Underinflation increases rolling resistance, leading to uneven wear and reduced fuel economy.
Reduced responsiveness can delay a driver’s ability to sense changes in road conditions.
Hot Weather and Tire Pressure
Heat causes air inside the tire to expand, which can push pressure beyond recommended levels during extended driving.
Excess pressure limits the tire’s surface contact with the road, reducing traction and braking effectiveness.
Long routes, heavy loads, and high pavement temperatures amplify pressure buildup.
Elevated temperatures increase stress on tire components, raising the risk of failure if pressures are not properly managed.
Drivers should take action if a tire pressure warning light illuminates, if tires show uneven or rapid tread wear, or if the vehicle feels less responsive or unusually “floaty” while driving. Visible tire damage, bulging, or vibration should also be addressed immediately. Best practices include carrying a reliable tire pressure gauge rather than relying solely on TPMS alerts, promptly reporting recurring pressure loss or abnormalities, and treating tire pressure as a dynamic safety check that requires attention year-round, not just seasonally.
Extreme driving conditions don’t create risk in isolation, they expose it. Ice, freezing rain, and extreme heat each affect vehicles and drivers in different, often subtle ways that aren’t always obvious in the moment. By understanding how surface conditions, temperature, vehicle systems, and equipment like tires interact, fleets and drivers can move beyond seasonal checklists toward more informed, proactive decisions. The goal isn’t to eliminate exposure entirely, but to recognize changing conditions early, adjust expectations accordingly, and apply sound judgment supported by training, policy, and planning. When awareness and preparation align, extreme conditions become more manageable, and preventable incidents remain just that: preventable.