If you live anywhere with cold winter weather, it's important to know how to get your car out of related trouble. As important, but less discussed, is how to prevent some of those situations from happening in the first place. The tips below should help with that.
Prevent car and trunk doors from freezing shut in the winter by spraying or wiping the rubber gaskets with a coating of a commercial multi-purpose lubricant or vegetable oil. The oil will seal out any water that could later freeze. This causes no harm to the gaskets.
Put a strip of tape over your car door locks before going through a car wash in cold weather. This will keep out water that could later freeze and make the locks inoperable. Once you're out of the car wash, remove the tape.
To keep ice from forming on windshield wiper blades and hampering their operation, wipe each blade with a soft cloth soaked in full-strength rubbing alcohol.
No one enjoys scraping ice off the windshield on a freezing cold morning. To avoid the tedious job, slice an onion in half and rub the cut sides against your windshield and car windows the night before a freeze to keep frost from forming.
To keep your windshield from frosting overnight, position inexpensive rubber bath mats over the glass. Hold them in place with the windshield wipers.
On cold nights, slip plastic bags over your side mirrors and hold them in place with clothespins. In the morning, remove the bags and your mirrors will be ice-free.
Winter driving can be frustrating — not to mention dangerous — when the inside of your windshield keeps fogging up. Here are three ways of dealing with foggy glass.
Next time everyone else gets stuck with icy trouble, you'll be driving by with a smile after using these handy preventative tips.