Aquaplaning
When tires lose contact with the road
Aquaplaning (hydroplaning) occurs when tires ride on top of water rather than the road surface. During aquaplaning, you have virtually no control over steering or braking until contact is restored.
Why This Matters
Aquaplaning can happen suddenly with no warning. Worn tires, excessive speed, and standing water dramatically increase the risk. Knowing the correct response is critical.
Key Actions to Take
Maintain good tire tread (minimum 3mm for wet conditions)
Reduce speed in wet conditions
Avoid standing water and flooded lanes
If aquaplaning starts, ease off the accelerator
Do NOT brake - keep the wheel straight
Do
- Check tire pressures and tread regularly
- Follow tire tracks of vehicles ahead
- Look ahead for standing water
- Keep a firm, steady grip on the wheel
Don't
- Brake hard during aquaplaning
- Make sudden steering inputs
- Speed through standing water
- Use cruise control in wet conditions
Pro Tips
Aquaplaning risk increases dramatically above 80km/h
When you feel the steering go light, you may be aquaplaning
Quality tires with good tread resist aquaplaning better
Important Warning
When aquaplaning, resist the urge to brake or steer sharply. Hold the wheel steady, ease off the gas, and wait for the tires to regain contact - this usually takes only seconds.
Related Scenarios
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