An effective cheap solution could be to just mold a clear plastic insert that fits into the shelf of the front bumper to eliminate the snow cave effect. Hmm, make you could even DIY with plexiglass.
As a bonus possibly add heating elements into it where the headlights shine through.
i really appreciate this post. So you don’t think having the headlights recessed behind the bumper shelf is any worse than the other trucks you’ve driven?
We live in Colorado, where we leave for a weekend skiing trip in the mountains at 5 p.m. on Fridays. By then, it's already dark, and the drive of an hour and a half through the mountains is usually accompanied by snowfall somewhere along the way. The same goes for the return trip. Naturally, the...
I'd love for them to chime in here with their experience driving through snow storms. Not trying to be sarcastic, being genuine, it's the only thing holding me back at this point.
I was referring to your second reply about stopping periodically to clean of the headlights and your response was that then you're not driving safe. Stopping on i-70 to clean headlights is definitely not safe!
I don't disagree with you on the part about a roof mounted light bar, also not safe...
Oh man, living in Colorado and being able to drive over an hour in a snowstorm to go skiing, this is a problem for me. It’s holding me back on pulling the trigger on a cybertruck.
Would spraying a deicer on them actually work?