When you click on links to various merchants on this site and make a purchase, this can result in this site earning a commission. Affiliate programs and affiliations include, but are not limited to, the eBay Partner Network.
Here is the senario: It snowed a few weeks back. It was cold and the snow was real fine. I'm sure the Eskimos have a name for that but I don't. It was just really light and fine. Anyway I had some piled up on the hood and while driving hoe from work the interior windows would fog up. I had opened up the windows to get some ventilation and started to get hit by snow nad put the sindows up. But I'm still getting hit with snow. Turns out it's getting sucked in and coming out through my defrosters. It's melted by this time but still hitting me.
I know the easiest solution would be to clean off the vents but I usually don't. "Wetter" snow never gave me this problem. I was just curiou if this ever happened to anyone else and if the trucks/cars that have the cabin air filters had this occur would there be some kind of mold/mildew problem occur?
It's pretty normal here. I don't use the de-frost setting until the engine warms enough to have heat warm enough to melt the frost that accumilates in the vents before it exits the vent.
Rezvani's Latest Post-Apocalyptic Monster Is a Ford F-150 Raptor Underneath
Slideshow: Called the Fortress, the 850-horsepower pickup combines Raptor underpinnings with military-inspired features, survival equipment, and a starting price of $285,000.