Black Ice | WEDGE ISSUE WARNING
#76
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I would like to ask ... please share where you live (or lived) to have knowledge about different ice conditions.
Not all ice is created the same.
Black ice is unique in temps below 0F (-18C): Black ice happens when motor vehicles are stopped and idling, the exhaust warm snow & ice on the road surface. When the vehicles moves on, the melt freezes quickly. Road salt is not effective at these temps and black ice is common at stop lights and on road after rush hour congestion. It is near impossible to see black ice (and the reason for the name).
Not all ice is created the same.
Black ice is unique in temps below 0F (-18C): Black ice happens when motor vehicles are stopped and idling, the exhaust warm snow & ice on the road surface. When the vehicles moves on, the melt freezes quickly. Road salt is not effective at these temps and black ice is common at stop lights and on road after rush hour congestion. It is near impossible to see black ice (and the reason for the name).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_ice]Black ice can also be because of fog or frost at low (road surface below freezing) temps that puts a glaze on roadways[/url]. Lots of time you'll see big crashes on the interstate that are caused by this, often in the presence of fog or a slight freezing mist at low temps. Like here as an especially dramatic example just before Christmas. I was driving in those very conditions and it didn't look all that bad. In the photos here of the interstate, you can't see anything particularly obvious.
But the tricky one in the presence of no weather issues is the black ice that forms from car exhaust condensing on very cold pavement. Typically pavement around here has some salt residue on it during the winter so if the temp is below zero for a protracted period, the salt doesn't work and can, in fact, be covered by black ice. So on a bright sunny day, all of a sudden cars may spin out or not be able to stop. That happens out this way not infrequently. Anytime it's a high traffic area either on the highway or in the city, and it's very cold, this kind of black ice can form.
Salt pretty doesn't work below about -8F and is something like 85% less effective at 15F than at 30F. MNDOT won't use it if the temp is below 15F and goes to other compounds or primarily to sand.
#77
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Salt pretty doesn't work below about -8F and is something like 85% less effective at 15F than at 30F. MNDOT won't use it if the temp is below 15F and goes to other compounds or primarily to sand.
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#78
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Not entirely true - black ice is called black ice because it's thin and transparent and therefore is difficult to see. A major cause of black ice is car exhaust which contains water in vapor form which can condense it when it hits a cold roadway. It can happen on any part of a roadway and is almost not because of a car exhaust melting ice and snow. I live out in the sticks in Minnesota, and it's not at all unusual to find black ice in the wheel track part of a lane right where the exhaust would be. I have been driving on sunny subzero days on interstate highways and started to spin out when I've driven over a bridge where the roadway is especially cold. The driving trick is to get your wheels out the typical wheel paths (and away from where the exhaust would condense) onto the shoulder.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_ice]Black ice can also be because of fog or frost at low (road surface below freezing) temps that puts a glaze on roadways. Lots of time you'll see big crashes on the interstate that are caused by this, often in the presence of fog or a slight freezing mist at low temps. Like here as an especially dramatic example just before Christmas. I was driving in those very conditions and it didn't look all that bad. In the photos here of the interstate, you can't see anything particularly obvious.
But the tricky one in the presence of no weather issues is the black ice that forms from car exhaust condensing on very cold pavement. Typically pavement around here has some salt residue on it during the winter so if the temp is below zero for a protracted period, the salt doesn't work and can, in fact, be covered by black ice. So on a bright sunny day, all of a sudden cars may spin out or not be able to stop. That happens out this way not infrequently. Anytime it's a high traffic area either on the highway or in the city, and it's very cold, this kind of black ice can form.
Salt pretty doesn't work below about -8F and is something like 85% less effective at 15F than at 30F. MNDOT won't use it if the temp is below 15F and goes to other compounds or primarily to sand.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_ice]Black ice can also be because of fog or frost at low (road surface below freezing) temps that puts a glaze on roadways. Lots of time you'll see big crashes on the interstate that are caused by this, often in the presence of fog or a slight freezing mist at low temps. Like here as an especially dramatic example just before Christmas. I was driving in those very conditions and it didn't look all that bad. In the photos here of the interstate, you can't see anything particularly obvious.
But the tricky one in the presence of no weather issues is the black ice that forms from car exhaust condensing on very cold pavement. Typically pavement around here has some salt residue on it during the winter so if the temp is below zero for a protracted period, the salt doesn't work and can, in fact, be covered by black ice. So on a bright sunny day, all of a sudden cars may spin out or not be able to stop. That happens out this way not infrequently. Anytime it's a high traffic area either on the highway or in the city, and it's very cold, this kind of black ice can form.
Salt pretty doesn't work below about -8F and is something like 85% less effective at 15F than at 30F. MNDOT won't use it if the temp is below 15F and goes to other compounds or primarily to sand.
I live in Hopkins, but I have rural roots and have driven many miles on low traffic rural roads, always interesting during the sub-zero weather. To add to my background, my vehicle growing up was an old field truck (1980 Chevy), and it was rear wheel drive ... great vehicle for *****ties (AKA donuts), but also taught me a lot about controlling a vehicle with limited traction.
#79
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I suspect you’ll also find that a whole lot of other people who post in the Winter Forums commute as well.
And?
Nobody thinks Minneapolis is the only place that gets cold ... but there are few large cities (Canada has most of the others) that have extended periods of sub-zero (F) temps. Getting down to 0F/-18C for a night is cold ... but going 4-5 days without getting above 0F/-18C, that's definitely a different level of cold.
And since we are totally off topic, my buddies are up riding the Arrowhead 135 yesterday and today ... They start at International Falls (Frostbite Falls for all the Rocky and Bullwinkle fans), they have gone 2 weeks (14 days) without temps getting above 0F/-18C (I know, I know ... that was back when my grandpa was in diapers).
Lastly, there is somebody in this thread that is hyper-focused on one contributing factors to sub-zero black ice forming on road surfaces, and sure that single source wouldn't likely be enough to create enough ice to cause traction issues, yet it is clearly one of the contributing factors. This information was posted last week as a link, but I've copied text and added it to the tread to help those that just scrolled past the link:
Reference: https://minnesota.cbslocal.com/2021/...-temperatures/
Reference: https://minnesota.cbslocal.com/2021/...-temperatures/
“When traffic slows down a lot or even stops in some areas, even your exhaust, it can drip and those droplets then freeze and create black ice,” said Meyer.
To address the “how often [does water drip from an exhaust system]” issue, it’s not going to drip every time a car stops. Once the exhaust system is warmed, the water doesn’t condense and drip out of the system but comes out as vapor. It also comes out at a much smaller quantity (5 µg/foot). Water that comes from exhaust systems at start up is likely water that was left over in the exhaust system when the car was shut off.
Let’s also address the “number of cars” issue. Let’s say that 1000 cars pass by an intersection and drip 50 mL of water each time they stop. That’s 50,000 mL of water. That’s a lot, right!? Yep. About 13 gallons. If you freeze that 13 gallons in an ice sheet 1mm (0.04”) thick, it would cover a whopping square that is a whopping 223mm wide. That’s 8”. Quite the ice sheet there.
Sure, you could spread it wider but it has to be thinner and at some point, it disappears below the imperfections in the roadway and isn’t a problem anymore. On the other hand, at 0°F or subzero temperatures, water that hits the ground is going to freeze very quickly in a thicker layer. But the thicker the layer, the less spread and, again, the water isn’t an issue…certainly not a “sheet of invisible ice”.
To be clear, I’m not “hyper-focused” on car exhaust as a “one contributing factor” of ice formation. Quite the opposite, I’m focused on car exhaust as being an very minor contributor to road ice formation. JohnJ80 posted the oft made statement that
A major cause of black ice is car exhaust which contains water in vapor form which can condense it when it hits a cold roadway.
As to other causes of ice, I have no problem with the way many articles describe “black ice” as forming, either by compaction and melting of snow fall or from freezing drizzle or fog. Many of the same articles that falsely claim that car exhaust is a major contributor will say something like “[black ice] generally looks like wet asphalt.”. Your own video shows exactly that. My objection is to the idea that “black ice” is invisible and/or unexpected. The road looks wet and it’s below the freezing point of water. What part of that says “oh, it can’t be icy!”?
Going way back to the OP, if you're riding a bike during a sub-zero cold snap, you'd look out for black ice at stop lights, in the traffic lanes, where the stopped/idling cars create the conditions that will melt any water on the road surface (and add some exhaust vaper too). Moreover, the highways may be treated with better ice-melt chemicals, but you won't likely see that same treatment on the side streets where a person would ride a bike.
Again, my objecting isn’t to the ice part or, perhaps, even to the “black ice” part. I object to the “I couldn’t see it” or “it was invisible” part.
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Stuart Black
Gold Fever Three days of dirt in Colorado
Pokin' around the Poconos A cold ride around Lake Erie
Dinosaurs in Colorado A mountain bike guide to the Purgatory Canyon dinosaur trackway
Solo Without Pie. The search for pie in the Midwest.
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Days of Wineless Roads. Bed and Breakfasting along the KATY
Twisting Down the Alley. Misadventures in tornado alley.
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#80
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_ice]Black ice can also be because of fog or frost at low (road surface below freezing) temps that puts a glaze on roadways. Lots of time you'll see big crashes on the interstate that are caused by this, often in the presence of fog or a slight freezing mist at low temps. Like here as an especially dramatic example just before Christmas. I was driving in those very conditions and it didn't look all that bad. In the photos here of the interstate, you can't see anything particularly obvious.

The road in general looks wet. I can’t see the temperature but the report states that it is cold. Cold + water = ice. What is so hard to understand?
But the tricky one in the presence of no weather issues is the black ice that forms from car exhaust condensing on very cold pavement. Typically pavement around here has some salt residue on it during the winter so if the temp is below zero for a protracted period, the salt doesn't work and can, in fact, be covered by black ice. So on a bright sunny day, all of a sudden cars may spin out or not be able to stop. That happens out this way not infrequently. Anytime it's a high traffic area either on the highway or in the city, and it's very cold, this kind of black ice can form.
Salt pretty doesn't work below about -8F and is something like 85% less effective at 15F than at 30F. MNDOT won't use it if the temp is below 15F and goes to other compounds or primarily to sand.
__________________
Stuart Black
Gold Fever Three days of dirt in Colorado
Pokin' around the Poconos A cold ride around Lake Erie
Dinosaurs in Colorado A mountain bike guide to the Purgatory Canyon dinosaur trackway
Solo Without Pie. The search for pie in the Midwest.
Picking the Scablands. Washington and Oregon, 2005. Pie and spiders on the Columbia River!
Days of Wineless Roads. Bed and Breakfasting along the KATY
Twisting Down the Alley. Misadventures in tornado alley.
Stuart Black
Gold Fever Three days of dirt in Colorado
Pokin' around the Poconos A cold ride around Lake Erie
Dinosaurs in Colorado A mountain bike guide to the Purgatory Canyon dinosaur trackway
Solo Without Pie. The search for pie in the Midwest.
Picking the Scablands. Washington and Oregon, 2005. Pie and spiders on the Columbia River!
Days of Wineless Roads. Bed and Breakfasting along the KATY
Twisting Down the Alley. Misadventures in tornado alley.
#81
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Your posts is more detailed than mine (thanks) and I totally agree with all your points.
I live in Hopkins, but I have rural roots and have driven many miles on low traffic rural roads, always interesting during the sub-zero weather. To add to my background, my vehicle growing up was an old field truck (1980 Chevy), and it was rear wheel drive ... great vehicle for *****ties (AKA donuts), but also taught me a lot about controlling a vehicle with limited traction.
I live in Hopkins, but I have rural roots and have driven many miles on low traffic rural roads, always interesting during the sub-zero weather. To add to my background, my vehicle growing up was an old field truck (1980 Chevy), and it was rear wheel drive ... great vehicle for *****ties (AKA donuts), but also taught me a lot about controlling a vehicle with limited traction.
I knew exactly why the truck spun and never did it again. I didn’t blame it on “invisible” ice.
__________________
Stuart Black
Gold Fever Three days of dirt in Colorado
Pokin' around the Poconos A cold ride around Lake Erie
Dinosaurs in Colorado A mountain bike guide to the Purgatory Canyon dinosaur trackway
Solo Without Pie. The search for pie in the Midwest.
Picking the Scablands. Washington and Oregon, 2005. Pie and spiders on the Columbia River!
Days of Wineless Roads. Bed and Breakfasting along the KATY
Twisting Down the Alley. Misadventures in tornado alley.
Stuart Black
Gold Fever Three days of dirt in Colorado
Pokin' around the Poconos A cold ride around Lake Erie
Dinosaurs in Colorado A mountain bike guide to the Purgatory Canyon dinosaur trackway
Solo Without Pie. The search for pie in the Midwest.
Picking the Scablands. Washington and Oregon, 2005. Pie and spiders on the Columbia River!
Days of Wineless Roads. Bed and Breakfasting along the KATY
Twisting Down the Alley. Misadventures in tornado alley.
#82
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This Toad is a bike-commuter, but it's not part of my BF handle. So if commuter is lesser, than this Toad is lesser too.
Somebody in this thread seems to put words in other people's post that don't exist, and clear way too much time on their hands.
I mean there's this weird repeated issue of 'blaming' black ice for crashes ... the OP is talking about being a defensive rider by knowing where ice can form under different conditions. This Toad has never crashed on black ice, but I've lost traction on it. And the video in the OP is not blaming the refreeze for the crash, it's blaming a dumb Toad for leaving the winter bike at home ... the bike with studded tires.
Object all you want, but sub-zero black ice doesn't look like wet road (the way refreeze looks like wet roads); and that's the reason it's very dangerous. But feel free to ignore the article for MN media talking with MNDOT about black ice in temps below 0F/-18C... I'm sure it's just fake news.
Somebody in this thread seems to put words in other people's post that don't exist, and clear way too much time on their hands.
I mean there's this weird repeated issue of 'blaming' black ice for crashes ... the OP is talking about being a defensive rider by knowing where ice can form under different conditions. This Toad has never crashed on black ice, but I've lost traction on it. And the video in the OP is not blaming the refreeze for the crash, it's blaming a dumb Toad for leaving the winter bike at home ... the bike with studded tires.
Object all you want, but sub-zero black ice doesn't look like wet road (the way refreeze looks like wet roads); and that's the reason it's very dangerous. But feel free to ignore the article for MN media talking with MNDOT about black ice in temps below 0F/-18C... I'm sure it's just fake news.

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Well, the thread title includes "wedge issue", so what can one expect? Some people are mighty impressed with themselves and want the rest of us to share in that glow. That my impression is the opposite may have to do with my nearly 40 years as working academic scientist. But as my grant funding doesn't depend on it in this case, I don't really care to point out the obvious distortions that are aimed at winning a debate rather than illuminating the problem
I'll do my best to avoid all kinds of slick ice and enjoy the great outdoors of the Minnesota winter.
Rock on Hypno Toad . Keep the rubber side down as best you can and make sure to post the videos when human imperfections intervene. One day we may even cross paths on the actual trail. (Oh, and good luck in the Loppet race this weekend)
I'll do my best to avoid all kinds of slick ice and enjoy the great outdoors of the Minnesota winter.
Rock on Hypno Toad . Keep the rubber side down as best you can and make sure to post the videos when human imperfections intervene. One day we may even cross paths on the actual trail. (Oh, and good luck in the Loppet race this weekend)
Last edited by MinnMan; 02-03-22 at 07:05 PM.
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#84
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So being a “commuter” makes me a lesser cyclist? Being only a commuter who rides to work year around for most of 45 years made me into a winter cyclist by default. Even here in supposedly winter free Denver
, I’ve had to deal with ice, snow, cold, freezing drizzle, etc. I’m not inexperienced with winter…in fact, quite the opposite.
I suspect you’ll also find that a whole lot of other people who post in the Winter Forums commute as well.
And?
Who said that Minneapolis is the only place that gets cold? I haven’t. I have said that other places experience cold weather. No, not as cold as you get but even here in Denver we have cold enough weather to freeze water. We even have freezing drizzle and the dreaded “black ice”. I’ve certainly crashed on it enough.
Ummm…who’s the one getting off topic?
I’ve read dozens of similar articles and they are so similar that a case for plagiarism could be made. They all say the same thing. And they are all wrong...because science! As this is actually germane to the discussion, let’s look (again) at this quote
As I said before, how much water drips out of the exhaust? And, follow up, how often? I don’t disagree that the drips can freeze when they hit the ground but the issue is one of volume. I’ve stated in posts above that the amount of water is certainly less than 50 mL. For the metrically challenged, that’s about 1/3 cup or 3 tablespoons of water. 50 mL is likely far too much but let’s go with that. How far is 1/3 of a cup going to spread in near zero conditions? 1/3 of a cup at room temperature isn’t going to spread much either even on a crowned road.
To address the “how often [does water drip from an exhaust system]” issue, it’s not going to drip every time a car stops. Once the exhaust system is warmed, the water doesn’t condense and drip out of the system but comes out as vapor. It also comes out at a much smaller quantity (5 µg/foot). Water that comes from exhaust systems at start up is likely water that was left over in the exhaust system when the car was shut off.
Let’s also address the “number of cars” issue. Let’s say that 1000 cars pass by an intersection and drip 50 mL of water each time they stop. That’s 50,000 mL of water. That’s a lot, right!? Yep. About 13 gallons. If you freeze that 13 gallons in an ice sheet 1mm (0.04”) thick, it would cover a whopping square that is a whopping 223mm wide. That’s 8”. Quite the ice sheet there.
Sure, you could spread it wider but it has to be thinner and at some point, it disappears below the imperfections in the roadway and isn’t a problem anymore. On the other hand, at 0°F or subzero temperatures, water that hits the ground is going to freeze very quickly in a thicker layer. But the thicker the layer, the less spread and, again, the water isn’t an issue…certainly not a “sheet of invisible ice”.
To be clear, I’m not “hyper-focused” on car exhaust as a “one contributing factor” of ice formation. Quite the opposite, I’m focused on car exhaust as being an very minor contributor to road ice formation. JohnJ80 posted the oft made statement that
I have looked for some scientific paper that would back this up for many years. I have yet to find any kind of research that states this. I’ve found lots and lots and lots of news articles…both print and broadcast as well as someone in a state department of transportation…that state this but there is nothing that is data backed. It is simply untrue.
As to other causes of ice, I have no problem with the way many articles describe “black ice” as forming, either by compaction and melting of snow fall or from freezing drizzle or fog. Many of the same articles that falsely claim that car exhaust is a major contributor will say something like “[black ice] generally looks like wet asphalt.”. Your own video shows exactly that. My objection is to the idea that “black ice” is invisible and/or unexpected. The road looks wet and it’s below the freezing point of water. What part of that says “oh, it can’t be icy!”?
Not just “sub-zero”. Ice (or snow) is more slick closer to the freezing point because there can be a layer of water acting as lubrication. I think it was pointed out above that ice skates work because there is a thin layer of melt water between the blade and the ice and that the colder the ice, the harder it is to generate that layer of lubrication. Your crash is very similar to dozens of crashes on ice that I’ve experienced on a bicycle while commuting (The horror!). I’ve crashed at cold temperatures but if the temperature is closer to freezing, crashing due to the wheels slipping is greatly increased.
Again, my objecting isn’t to the ice part or, perhaps, even to the “black ice” part. I object to the “I couldn’t see it” or “it was invisible” part.

I suspect you’ll also find that a whole lot of other people who post in the Winter Forums commute as well.
And?
Who said that Minneapolis is the only place that gets cold? I haven’t. I have said that other places experience cold weather. No, not as cold as you get but even here in Denver we have cold enough weather to freeze water. We even have freezing drizzle and the dreaded “black ice”. I’ve certainly crashed on it enough.
Ummm…who’s the one getting off topic?
I’ve read dozens of similar articles and they are so similar that a case for plagiarism could be made. They all say the same thing. And they are all wrong...because science! As this is actually germane to the discussion, let’s look (again) at this quote
As I said before, how much water drips out of the exhaust? And, follow up, how often? I don’t disagree that the drips can freeze when they hit the ground but the issue is one of volume. I’ve stated in posts above that the amount of water is certainly less than 50 mL. For the metrically challenged, that’s about 1/3 cup or 3 tablespoons of water. 50 mL is likely far too much but let’s go with that. How far is 1/3 of a cup going to spread in near zero conditions? 1/3 of a cup at room temperature isn’t going to spread much either even on a crowned road.
To address the “how often [does water drip from an exhaust system]” issue, it’s not going to drip every time a car stops. Once the exhaust system is warmed, the water doesn’t condense and drip out of the system but comes out as vapor. It also comes out at a much smaller quantity (5 µg/foot). Water that comes from exhaust systems at start up is likely water that was left over in the exhaust system when the car was shut off.
Let’s also address the “number of cars” issue. Let’s say that 1000 cars pass by an intersection and drip 50 mL of water each time they stop. That’s 50,000 mL of water. That’s a lot, right!? Yep. About 13 gallons. If you freeze that 13 gallons in an ice sheet 1mm (0.04”) thick, it would cover a whopping square that is a whopping 223mm wide. That’s 8”. Quite the ice sheet there.
Sure, you could spread it wider but it has to be thinner and at some point, it disappears below the imperfections in the roadway and isn’t a problem anymore. On the other hand, at 0°F or subzero temperatures, water that hits the ground is going to freeze very quickly in a thicker layer. But the thicker the layer, the less spread and, again, the water isn’t an issue…certainly not a “sheet of invisible ice”.
To be clear, I’m not “hyper-focused” on car exhaust as a “one contributing factor” of ice formation. Quite the opposite, I’m focused on car exhaust as being an very minor contributor to road ice formation. JohnJ80 posted the oft made statement that
I have looked for some scientific paper that would back this up for many years. I have yet to find any kind of research that states this. I’ve found lots and lots and lots of news articles…both print and broadcast as well as someone in a state department of transportation…that state this but there is nothing that is data backed. It is simply untrue.
As to other causes of ice, I have no problem with the way many articles describe “black ice” as forming, either by compaction and melting of snow fall or from freezing drizzle or fog. Many of the same articles that falsely claim that car exhaust is a major contributor will say something like “[black ice] generally looks like wet asphalt.”. Your own video shows exactly that. My objection is to the idea that “black ice” is invisible and/or unexpected. The road looks wet and it’s below the freezing point of water. What part of that says “oh, it can’t be icy!”?
Not just “sub-zero”. Ice (or snow) is more slick closer to the freezing point because there can be a layer of water acting as lubrication. I think it was pointed out above that ice skates work because there is a thin layer of melt water between the blade and the ice and that the colder the ice, the harder it is to generate that layer of lubrication. Your crash is very similar to dozens of crashes on ice that I’ve experienced on a bicycle while commuting (The horror!). I’ve crashed at cold temperatures but if the temperature is closer to freezing, crashing due to the wheels slipping is greatly increased.
Again, my objecting isn’t to the ice part or, perhaps, even to the “black ice” part. I object to the “I couldn’t see it” or “it was invisible” part.
The only person that said it’s “invisible ice” at least with respect to my posts, is you. I said it’s “transparent” and “difficult” to see. Big difference but without much of a distinction at 65mph and when you don’t have the luxury of examining it closely while stopped.
you’re right, it *is* a matter of volume. And when you have high traffic (150,000 cars in a rush hour, for example and for sure) going over a piece of pavement that has cooled to very cold temperatures where salt no longer works with low angle sun (we’re up here at 45 latitude or higher) then there is sufficient volume and the conditions are right. it builds up slowly, it is thin, and it is very difficult to see. Don’t need a scientific paper to watch what happens in front of your own two eyes in a serious cold snap that drives temps down subzero for days.
We’re starting to see it happening again. For the last two weeks, subzero night temps and single digit day temps have been the rule and the ground temps are getting pretty far down there.
Also, FWIW, I have never seen it happen at lower latitudes. I live in Minnesota now and have for a long time, I grew up near Chicago, spent a lot of time in northern Wisconsin and Colorado. I’ve only seen it in Minnesota and in northern Wisconsin but not Chicago or Colorado.
It’s just not worth arguing with you about this. It happens, these are the conditions and you can choose to believe it or not. If you choose not to, and you come up here, in the right conditions you’ll learn the hard way how it all works. We deal with it all the time and not as a paper checking exercise.
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Somebody in this thread seems to put words in other people's post that don't exist, and clear way too much time on their hands
I mean there's this weird repeated issue of 'blaming' black ice for crashes ... the OP is talking about being a defensive rider by knowing where ice can form under different conditions. This Toad has never crashed on black ice, but I've lost traction on it. And the video in the OP is not blaming the refreeze for the crash, it's blaming a dumb Toad for leaving the winter bike at home ... the bike with studded tires.
Object all you want, but sub-zero black ice doesn't look like wet road (the way refreeze looks like wet roads); and that's the reason it's very dangerous. But feel free to ignore the article for MN media talking with MNDOT about black ice in temps below 0F/-18C... I'm sure it's just fake news.

As to your “sub-zero black ice” in that article do you mean this
“How does black ice form throughout subzero temperatures? Anne Meyer, spokesperson for the Minnesota Department of Transportation, said the first aspect was the gentle snowfall.“That was enough to give those tires something to melt when they were driving during the commute,” she said.
Then the cold quickly froze the melted snow, creating a thin, slick sheet on the pavement that drivers often can’t see. If the snow had fallen midday when the sun was in the sky, it likely would have stayed in liquid form until nightfall.
“If the snow would have happened overnight on the weekend, we would have had less traffic and as a result less areas of icy terrain,” Meyer added.
Then the cold quickly froze the melted snow, creating a thin, slick sheet on the pavement that drivers often can’t see. If the snow had fallen midday when the sun was in the sky, it likely would have stayed in liquid form until nightfall.
“If the snow would have happened overnight on the weekend, we would have had less traffic and as a result less areas of icy terrain,” Meyer added.
Officials say black ice creates the appearance of a wet surface but is actually a thin, transparent layer of ice on roads and bridges.
Black ice forms when melting snow refreezes or when rain, drizzle, mist or fog freezes. It is most common at night and early morning when it is dark and temperatures are lowest.
Black ice forms when melting snow refreezes or when rain, drizzle, mist or fog freezes. It is most common at night and early morning when it is dark and temperatures are lowest.
Or this one
The Minnesota Department of Transportation is now advising motorists to slow down and watch for icy conditions, including black ice, which is caused by rain and freezing temperatures.Black ice creates the appearance of a wet surface, but it is actually a thin, clear layer of ice on roads and bridges. Black ice forms when melting snow refreezes or when rain, drizzle, mist or fog freezes. It is most common at night and early morning when it is dark and temperatures are lowest.
Amazingly you can find similar stories all about “black ice” that is formed from melt water, freezing drizzle, freezing rain, wind blown snow glazing the roadway, etc. It’s almost like it’s a well known, well understood, wide spread phenomena. In other words, it ain’t all that special.
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Last edited by cyccommute; 02-04-22 at 12:12 AM.
#86
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The only person that said it’s “invisible ice” at least with respect to my posts, is you. I said it’s “transparent” and “difficult” to see. Big difference but without much of a distinction at 65mph and when you don’t have the luxury of examining it closely while stopped.
…practically invisible to drivers or people stepping on it. There is, thus, a risk of slippage and subsequent accident due to the unexpected loss of traction.
you’re right, it *is* a matter of volume. And when you have high traffic (150,000 cars in a rush hour, for example and for sure) going over a piece of pavement that has cooled to very cold temperatures where salt no longer works with low angle sun (we’re up here at 45 latitude or higher) then there is sufficient volume and the conditions are right. it builds up slowly, it is thin, and it is very difficult to see. Don’t need a scientific paper to watch what happens in front of your own two eyes in a serious cold snap that drives temps down subzero for days.
What, exactly, have you “watch[ed] happen[ing] in front of your own two eyes” hen it comes to car exhaust freezing on the roadway at intersections? Car exhaust is hotter than then subzero air and while it might put out a cloud, it rises away from the cars. If car exhaust were a “major contributor” to ice formation at intersections, everything at the intersection should be covered in the same layer and thickness of ice. Street signs, benches, curbs, sidewalks, and even the walls of the building at the intersections. Anything that isn’t moving should be covered to the same thickness of ice.
Also, FWIW, I have never seen it happen at lower latitudes. I live in Minnesota now and have for a long time, I grew up near Chicago, spent a lot of time in northern Wisconsin and Colorado. I’ve only seen it in Minnesota and in northern Wisconsin but not Chicago or Colorado.
It’s just not worth arguing with you about this. It happens, these are the conditions and you can choose to believe it or not. If you choose not to, and you come up here, in the right conditions you’ll learn the hard way how it all works. We deal with it all the time and not as a paper checking exercise.
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#87
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Well, the thread title includes "wedge issue", so what can one expect? Some people are mighty impressed with themselves and want the rest of us to share in that glow. That my impression is the opposite may have to do with my nearly 40 years as working academic scientist. But as my grant funding doesn't depend on it in this case, I don't really care to point out the obvious distortions that are aimed at winning a debate rather than illuminating the problem
Are you really willing to accept this “car exhaust is a (sometimes, the) major contributor to glaze ice formation” idea? Without evidence? Have you looked at how much water vapor is available per gallon of gasoline burned and the distances that gallon of water is spread out over? It doesn’t bother you that there are no papers for such an extraordinary claim? I can point to at least a couple of things that have far more of an effect on glaze ice formation than car exhaust…precipitation and refreezing of melt water being the most obvious.
I'll do my best to avoid all kinds of slick ice and enjoy the great outdoors of the Minnesota winter.
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Stuart Black
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Last edited by cyccommute; 02-04-22 at 01:08 AM.
#88
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I made an units error in post 79. I used the wrong units and made an incorrect statement. 13 gallons (50 L) of water a millimeter thick would cover 50 sq meters. The area felt wrong when I posted it but I will correct the error here.
That does not mean that 13 gallons of water would cover that large an area. To put it in more road centric terms, a 2 lane street with parking has an 11 foot travel lane in both directions and two park lanes of the same dimensions for a total of 42 feet (13 m) wide. 13 gallons (50 L) would spread across the road from curb to curb and would be 13 feet (4 m) long. Yes that would be a lot of ice at an intersection but…
…that assumes 50 mL of water discharged from every car of that 1000 cars at the same spot and assumes that the water stay liquid enough to spread. Near 0°F, the water wouldn’t spread very far and won’t form a sheet of uniform thickness. The water would mound.
Additionally, cars don’t discharge that much water at each intersection. A cold exhaust will discharge some water but once warmed, they stop discharging liquid water and are warm enough to put out vapor instead of liquid.
That does not mean that 13 gallons of water would cover that large an area. To put it in more road centric terms, a 2 lane street with parking has an 11 foot travel lane in both directions and two park lanes of the same dimensions for a total of 42 feet (13 m) wide. 13 gallons (50 L) would spread across the road from curb to curb and would be 13 feet (4 m) long. Yes that would be a lot of ice at an intersection but…
…that assumes 50 mL of water discharged from every car of that 1000 cars at the same spot and assumes that the water stay liquid enough to spread. Near 0°F, the water wouldn’t spread very far and won’t form a sheet of uniform thickness. The water would mound.
Additionally, cars don’t discharge that much water at each intersection. A cold exhaust will discharge some water but once warmed, they stop discharging liquid water and are warm enough to put out vapor instead of liquid.
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Picking the Scablands. Washington and Oregon, 2005. Pie and spiders on the Columbia River!
Days of Wineless Roads. Bed and Breakfasting along the KATY
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#89
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Calling sub-zero black ice 'refreeze' is accurate but also very simpleminded. By this simple understand, all forms of frozen water are 'refreeze':
hail is just 'refreeze'
glaciers are just 'refreeze'
lake ice is just 'refreeze'
... even snow is just 'refreeze'.
Expanding on this point, snow is snow is snow, right? Unless your a ski resort. Then you have as many as 65 terms for different snow conditions. This person from CO likely knows that, since they are in a state that has a massive industry focused on snow sports (it's estimated that CO generates $4.8 billion from the snow sport industry). I would love to see this commuter tell a CO skier that snow is just snow and there's no need for specific terms.
hail is just 'refreeze'
glaciers are just 'refreeze'
lake ice is just 'refreeze'
... even snow is just 'refreeze'.
Expanding on this point, snow is snow is snow, right? Unless your a ski resort. Then you have as many as 65 terms for different snow conditions. This person from CO likely knows that, since they are in a state that has a massive industry focused on snow sports (it's estimated that CO generates $4.8 billion from the snow sport industry). I would love to see this commuter tell a CO skier that snow is just snow and there's no need for specific terms.

#90
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Again, you do know that Denver has cold weather. If that isn’t cold enough for you, we have a huge area to the west of Denver with temperatures and conditions to rival any thing you have in the upper MidWest. Antero Reservoir recorded the lowest temperature in the US this morning at -48°F.
High altitude CO gets cold, Northern MN gets cold too ... and how does this apply to the topic?
But hey, here's my buddy Justin, he just finished the Arrowhead 135, he posted this picture from Embarrass, MN.

(The thermometer might be inaccurate or he's in a low place colder than the local weather station which is 5 miles away at an airfield ... official temp yesterday was -38F)
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#92
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Funny guys
But geez Louise that's effing cold. I think the coldest I've been out in was -35c .
I have downhill skied at -30c and with the wind speed going on it was pretty dire.
Really can't imagine biking an endurance event with -20, -30, -40c temps. That really adds a challenge of just managing all the various aspects of your clothing properly over such a long period, not to mention fueling and hydration.
But geez Louise that's effing cold. I think the coldest I've been out in was -35c .
I have downhill skied at -30c and with the wind speed going on it was pretty dire.
Really can't imagine biking an endurance event with -20, -30, -40c temps. That really adds a challenge of just managing all the various aspects of your clothing properly over such a long period, not to mention fueling and hydration.
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#94
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FWIW, I've also spent a lot of time in Colorado in the mountains in all kinds of conditions and that includes a lot of snow and ice on roads. Colorado ice isn't nearly as persistent as ours is because we don't have as much sun nor is it as strong.
But hang in there - its a unique obsession you have there.

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This post wins ^^^^

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In our neck of the woods, intersections get glazed and super icy and I'm fairly certain that it's from the braking action friction that goes on.
Kinda like ice skates, apparently the pressure of the blade on the ice melts the ice for a fraction of a second and reduces the friction between blade and ice.
Cars constantly braking, and sliding locking up , must be a factor at intersections. You learn early on (after sailing through a stop sign) to be really damn careful of this. Years ago a neighbour was pushing her baby in a carriage and someone slid through and bumped into the carriage, all was ok, but both of them weren't watching enough.
here they salt and grit the crap out of intersections. Works, but boy it's tough on cars over the years. And my bike too-why I wash it after every ride.
Kinda like ice skates, apparently the pressure of the blade on the ice melts the ice for a fraction of a second and reduces the friction between blade and ice.
Cars constantly braking, and sliding locking up , must be a factor at intersections. You learn early on (after sailing through a stop sign) to be really damn careful of this. Years ago a neighbour was pushing her baby in a carriage and someone slid through and bumped into the carriage, all was ok, but both of them weren't watching enough.
here they salt and grit the crap out of intersections. Works, but boy it's tough on cars over the years. And my bike too-why I wash it after every ride.
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What would be helpful is to identify the source of water if it isn't from car exhaust. What are we (drivers, weatherfolk, scientists, etc.) missing? We have seen for decades ice form in the wheel tracks on the freeways in MN during rush hour on days below 0F with no wind and no blowing snow and no frost because the dew point is many degrees colder and no snow getting dragged onto the freeways from side streets because they are dry too. We don't see ice form in the wheel tracks when traffic is moving at normal speeds. But if there's a slow down because someone did something stupid, or people continue to show they can't successfully merge onto the freeway, or..., we see ice form. Why?
I suspect, but have no proof or research to validate my suspicions, that there are fewer incidents of such ice forming now than when I moved to the Twin Cities 33 years ago. Possible reasons for this could include more SUVs and other vehicles with higher clearances and hence exhaust pipes farther from the roadway, plus the old passenger cars used to direct their exhaust downward whereas now the tailpipes are straight, etc.
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I know that Denver gets cold, and I know that Minneapolis gets colder and STAYS colder. I know that the two cities are not the same climate.
High altitude CO gets cold, Northern MN gets cold too ... and how does this apply to the topic?
But hey, here's my buddy Justin, he just finished the Arrowhead 135, he posted this picture from Embarrass, MN.
(The thermometer might be inaccurate or he's in a low place colder than the local weather station which is 5 miles away at an airfield ... official temp yesterday was -38F)
High altitude CO gets cold, Northern MN gets cold too ... and how does this apply to the topic?
But hey, here's my buddy Justin, he just finished the Arrowhead 135, he posted this picture from Embarrass, MN.
(The thermometer might be inaccurate or he's in a low place colder than the local weather station which is 5 miles away at an airfield ... official temp yesterday was -38F)
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#99
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I was really planning on staying out of this but... <heavy sigh>
What would be helpful is to identify the source of water if it isn't from car exhaust. What are we (drivers, weatherfolk, scientists, etc.) missing? We have seen for decades ice form in the wheel tracks on the freeways in MN during rush hour on days below 0F with no wind and no blowing snow and no frost because the dew point is many degrees colder and no snow getting dragged onto the freeways from side streets because they are dry too. We don't see ice form in the wheel tracks when traffic is moving at normal speeds. But if there's a slow down because someone did something stupid, or people continue to show they can't successfully merge onto the freeway, or..., we see ice form. Why?
What would be helpful is to identify the source of water if it isn't from car exhaust. What are we (drivers, weatherfolk, scientists, etc.) missing? We have seen for decades ice form in the wheel tracks on the freeways in MN during rush hour on days below 0F with no wind and no blowing snow and no frost because the dew point is many degrees colder and no snow getting dragged onto the freeways from side streets because they are dry too. We don't see ice form in the wheel tracks when traffic is moving at normal speeds. But if there's a slow down because someone did something stupid, or people continue to show they can't successfully merge onto the freeway, or..., we see ice form. Why?
Also note that the statement is about ice at intersections. I’ve never seen any one say that ice on open roadways comes from car exhaust. At an intersection, a car driving down the road moves a whole lot of air which would stir any car exhaust moisture into the air around it. At highway speed, there is even more stirring of the air. Any moisture produced by a car (or multiple cars) would mix with moisture in the air. The atmosphere has far more moisture in it than the car exhaust and is actually the major contributor to ice formation.
The temperature of the exhaust also has to be considered. Exhaust from an engine is warmer than the surrounding air and moves upward. Add that to the stirring action of the car moving through the air and the exhaust is swept upward away from the roadway.
There are many more sources of water for ice formation that are readily available than car exhaust. Every news article I’ve read from the upper Midwest…and I’ve read hundreds of them…states something similar to this
Black ice creates the appearance of a wet surface but is actually a thin, transparent layer of ice on roads and bridges, MnDOT reported in a news release. Black ice forms when melting snow refreezes or when rain, drizzle, mist or fog freezes. It is most common at night and early morning when it is dark and temperatures are lowest.
I don’t even have a problem with calling it “thin [and] transparent”. It is. I just have a problem with people saying that it is “invisible”.
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#100
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Expanding on this point, snow is snow is snow, right? Unless your a ski resort. Then you have as many as 65 terms for different snow conditions.


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Dinosaurs in Colorado A mountain bike guide to the Purgatory Canyon dinosaur trackway
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Picking the Scablands. Washington and Oregon, 2005. Pie and spiders on the Columbia River!
Days of Wineless Roads. Bed and Breakfasting along the KATY
Twisting Down the Alley. Misadventures in tornado alley.
Stuart Black
Gold Fever Three days of dirt in Colorado
Pokin' around the Poconos A cold ride around Lake Erie
Dinosaurs in Colorado A mountain bike guide to the Purgatory Canyon dinosaur trackway
Solo Without Pie. The search for pie in the Midwest.
Picking the Scablands. Washington and Oregon, 2005. Pie and spiders on the Columbia River!
Days of Wineless Roads. Bed and Breakfasting along the KATY
Twisting Down the Alley. Misadventures in tornado alley.