July 4th Road Trip Car Checklist: What to Inspect Before You Leave Huntington
Written by Matt Winkfield, GMC Service Advisor — Moses Auto Mall | Published: June 5, 2026
Moses Auto Mall · 3301 US Route 60, Huntington, WV 25705 · Serving Huntington, Ashland KY, and Ironton OH
The stretch of I-64 between Huntington and the Kentucky border fills up fast every Fourth of July weekend. If you’re heading to Ashland for the fireworks, loading the family into the GMC for a run down to the New River Gorge, or making the longer haul toward Lewisburg or beyond — the single worst place to find out your vehicle wasn’t ready is the side of US-60 with the hazards on.
I’ve been a service advisor at Moses Auto Mall for years. Every summer, without fail, we see the same pattern: the week before July 4th, customers come in for a pre-trip inspection — and the week after, we see the ones who didn’t. The second group always has a harder story to tell. This checklist is the one I give my own customers before they pull out of our lot on US Route 60 and point their rig toward the highway.
- → 1. Tires: The First Thing I Check
- → 2. Fluids: What a Summer Trip Demands
- → 3. Brakes: Mountain Roads Require More
- → 4. Battery: Heat Is the Silent Killer
- → 5. Air Conditioning: Don’t Find Out the Hard Way
- → 6. Lights and Wipers: Safety You Can’t Ignore
- → 7. Emergency Kit: What Should Be in Your Trunk
- → Full Printable Checklist
- → Book Your Pre-Trip Inspection at Moses
1. Tires: The First Thing I Check on Every Vehicle
Tires are where road trip safety lives or dies. West Virginia and eastern Kentucky roads are not forgiving — the elevation changes on I-64 heading toward Charleston, the tight curves on WV-10 south through Wayne County, and summer construction zones between here and the New River Gorge all demand tires that are actually up to the job.
Here’s what I look at during every pre-trip walk-around:
| What to Check | Safe Range | Replace If… |
|---|---|---|
| Tread Depth | 4/32″ or more | At or below 2/32″ (legal minimum) |
| Tire Pressure | Per door jamb sticker (usually 32–36 PSI) | 5+ PSI over or under spec |
| Sidewall Condition | No cracks, bulges, or cuts | Any visible bulge or crack — no exceptions |
| Spare Tire | Inflated to spec (often 60 PSI for compact spare) | Flat, missing, or unknown condition |
| Tire Age | Under 6 years from manufacture date (DOT code) | 10 years regardless of tread remaining |
One thing most drivers miss: summer heat causes tire pressure to rise roughly 1 PSI for every 10°F of temperature increase. A tire that was set correctly in the morning at 72°F may be reading 3–4 PSI high by 2pm on a blacktop highway in July. Check your pressure cool, and check it again before you load up the vehicle. Our Parts team at Moses can confirm the right pressure spec for your exact model and trim — stop by or reach out through our Parts & Accessories team.
2. Fluids: What a Summer Road Trip Demands From Your Vehicle
People associate fluid checks with winter prep, but summer heat is harder on several critical systems than cold weather is. A transmission running hot on a long climb toward Sandstone or Beckley is working in conditions it wasn’t designed to ignore. These are the fluids I put eyes on before any long trip:
| Fluid | Check How | Red Flag |
|---|---|---|
| Engine Oil | Dipstick — engine cold or 5 min after shutdown | Dark black, gritty texture, or below MIN mark |
| Coolant / Antifreeze | Overflow reservoir — never open radiator cap hot | Below MIN, rusty discoloration, oily film on top |
| Brake Fluid | Clear reservoir near firewall | Below MIN, dark brown color (moisture contamination) |
| Power Steering Fluid | Reservoir dipstick or MIN/MAX lines | Whine on turning, foamy or low fluid |
| Windshield Washer | Top off reservoir — use summer-rated fluid | Empty — bug splatter on highway visibility is a real hazard |
If you’re within 1,000 miles of your next scheduled oil change, do it before the trip — not after. Pushing old oil through a hot engine on a 300-mile holiday run is a risk that costs more than the oil change. Our service team has open appointments this week ahead of the holiday weekend. Book your spot online here — we’re open Saturdays from 8AM to 2PM if the weekday schedule is tight.
3. Brakes: Mountain Roads in Our Market Require More
This one is non-negotiable for anyone driving the WV/KY/OH tri-state area on July 4th weekend. The elevation changes between Huntington and almost any destination east of here — Hawks Nest, Grandview, Babcock State Park — put sustained load on your brake system that flat-highway driving simply doesn’t. If your pads are borderline in town, they’re insufficient on descents.
Warning signs that your brakes need attention before a trip:
- Squealing or grinding when braking — especially at low speeds in a parking lot
- The vehicle pulls left or right when you apply the brakes
- Brake pedal feels soft, spongy, or travels unusually far before engaging
- Vibration through the steering wheel or seat under braking (warped rotors)
- A brake warning light that comes on even briefly
| Pad Thickness | Status | Road Trip Safe? |
|---|---|---|
| 8mm–12mm | ✓ New / Full Life | Yes |
| 4mm–7mm | ⚠ Mid-Life | Yes, but schedule service when you return |
| 2mm–3mm | ✗ Near Wear Limit | Replace before any mountain trip |
| Under 2mm | ✗✗ UNSAFE — Metal on Metal | Do not drive — service immediately |
4. Battery: Summer Heat Is the Silent Killer
Most drivers know that cold weather is hard on batteries. What they don’t know is that the actual damage accumulates in summer. Heat accelerates the chemical degradation inside the battery cells. The battery that barely makes it through a humid August in Huntington is the one that won’t start on a cold morning in October. Before you drive to Ashland for the fireworks on July 4th, know your battery’s age and load test result.
| Battery Age | Recommendation |
|---|---|
| Under 2 years | ✓ Generally reliable — visual inspection is sufficient |
| 2–4 years | ⚠ Request a load test — free at Moses Service |
| 4+ years | ✗ Replace before any extended road trip |
Also check the terminals for white or blue corrosion buildup. Even a strong battery can fail to deliver full power if the terminals are corroded. Our service techs Ben Swann and Josh Adkins — both GM-certified technicians — include a complimentary battery check as part of any service visit. It takes two minutes and it has saved more than a few holiday weekends for our customers.
5. Air Conditioning: Don’t Find Out at Mile 80 on I-64
July 4th weekend in the Tri-State. Full vehicle. Kids and dogs in back. You’ll know immediately if the AC isn’t right. More importantly, for elderly passengers or very young children, a failed air conditioning system in summer heat isn’t just uncomfortable — it’s a health risk on a long run.
Quick home test before bringing it in: Run your AC on max for five minutes. Set it to its coldest setting, full fan, recirculate on. Hold a thermometer at the center vent. A healthy system should produce air between 38°F and 48°F. Anything above 55°F on a humid July day indicates low refrigerant or a performance issue worth having checked before the trip.
Signs the system needs attention: weak airflow even on max fan, air that gets cool but not cold, musty or mildew smell from the vents, or intermittent cold air that cuts in and out. Book an AC performance check with our service team — our Huntington location is open Monday through Friday 7:30AM–5:30PM and Saturday 8AM–2PM.
6. Lights and Wipers: The Safety Check That Takes 10 Minutes
July 4th travel runs morning, afternoon, and late into the night. Fireworks end after dark, and driving home from Ashland or down US-60 after 10pm with a burned-out headlight is both dangerous and a traffic stop waiting to happen. This is the easiest check on the list and it’s the one most people skip.
| Check Item | How to Verify |
|---|---|
| Headlights (low & high beam) | Pull up near a wall or garage door, cycle both beams |
| Tail lights & brake lights | Ask a passenger to watch from behind while you cycle them |
| Turn signals (all four) | Walk around the vehicle with signals on — check all corners |
| Reverse lights | Near a reflective surface in reverse — both should illuminate |
| Wiper blades | Run washers — blades should clear cleanly, no streaking or skipping |
| Rear wiper (if equipped) | Test independently — rear wipers degrade faster than fronts |
Wiper blades are cheap and fast to replace. If yours are streaking, chattering, or more than 12 months old, swap them before you go. If you need a bulb or blade, our Parts & Accessories team carries OEM and quality replacement options for GMC, Cadillac, and Nissan models.
7. Emergency Roadside Kit: What Should Actually Be in Your Trunk
No inspection is perfect, and road trips introduce variables that no service tech can predict. A nail in the road outside Milton. An unexpected traffic stop on WV-35 that drains the battery. Being prepared doesn’t mean expecting to break down — it means making sure that if something does happen, you handle it in 15 minutes instead of 4 hours.
Here’s what I personally carry in my vehicle for any trip of more than 100 miles:
| Item | Why It Matters on a July Trip |
|---|---|
| Jumper cables or jump starter pack | Battery failure spikes on hot days. A lithium jump starter fits in a glove box. |
| Tire inflator / plug kit | Handles most slow leaks without needing a jack or spare swap. |
| Reflective triangles or flares | Visibility at dusk and night on WV mountain roads is limited. These save lives. |
| Gallon of water + coolant mix | Overheat on a summer climb is manageable if you have coolant on board. |
| Basic tool kit + duct tape | Loose heat shield, battery terminal, hose clamp — ten-minute fixes possible. |
| First aid kit | The basics. Pack it. |
| Phone charger / power bank | Navigation, emergency calls, and roadside apps all need battery. Don’t run out. |
Your Full July 4th Road Trip Vehicle Checklist
Run through this before you load up and head out. It covers everything above in a single at-a-glance format:
| Category | Check Item | Status |
|---|---|---|
| Tires | Tread depth — 4/32″ or more | ☐ OK ☐ Needs Service |
| Tires | Tire pressure set to door jamb spec | ☐ OK ☐ Needs Service |
| Tires | Sidewalls — no cracks or bulges | ☐ OK ☐ Needs Service |
| Tires | Spare tire — inflated and accessible | ☐ OK ☐ Needs Service |
| Fluids | Engine oil — level and condition | ☐ OK ☐ Needs Service |
| Fluids | Coolant — level and color in reservoir | ☐ OK ☐ Needs Service |
| Fluids | Brake fluid — level and color | ☐ OK ☐ Needs Service |
| Fluids | Windshield washer — topped with summer fluid | ☐ OK ☐ Needs Service |
| Brakes | No grinding, squealing, or pulling | ☐ OK ☐ Needs Service |
| Brakes | Pedal firm — no spongy feel | ☐ OK ☐ Needs Service |
| Battery | Age under 4 years or load test passed | ☐ OK ☐ Needs Service |
| Battery | Terminals clean — no corrosion | ☐ OK ☐ Needs Service |
| AC | Cold air at vent — 38°F–48°F on max setting | ☐ OK ☐ Needs Service |
| Lights | All exterior lights working — headlights, tails, signals | ☐ OK ☐ Needs Service |
| Wipers | Blades clear without streaking — replaced within 12 months | ☐ OK ☐ Needs Service |
| Trunk Kit | Jump starter / jumper cables on board | ☐ OK ☐ Add to Kit |
| Trunk Kit | Reflective triangles or flares | ☐ OK ☐ Add to Kit |
Frequently Asked Questions
How long does a pre-trip vehicle inspection take at Moses Auto Mall?
Most pre-trip inspections at Moses Auto Mall take 30 to 60 minutes depending on the findings. If all systems check out, it can be faster. If we find something that needs attention — like a brake pad at the wear limit or a battery that fails the load test — we’ll walk you through what we found and give you the option to address it before your trip. We’re open Monday through Friday 7:30AM–5:30PM and Saturday 8AM–2PM at 3301 US Route 60 in Huntington.
What’s the most common issue you find on vehicles before a summer road trip?
Low tire pressure and aged batteries are the two most frequent findings I see before summer holiday weekends. Tire pressure is easy to miss because modern vehicles with TPMS often don’t trigger the warning light until pressure is already 25% below spec. Batteries are the other — they test fine in June and fail in August because the summer heat has been silently damaging them all season. A quick load test catches it before your trip instead of during it.
Does Moses Auto Mall service all makes and models, or just GMC, Cadillac, and Nissan?
Our factory-certified technicians specialize in GMC, Cadillac, Buick, and Nissan vehicles, and our service department uses OEM parts for those brands. For pre-trip inspection services like tire pressure checks, battery tests, fluid top-offs, light checks, and wiper blade replacements, we can assist with most makes and models. Give us a call or schedule online and we’ll confirm availability for your specific vehicle.
How far does Moses Auto Mall serve? I’m coming from Ashland, KY or Ironton, OH.
We’re a Tri-State dealership and service center — Ashland, Kentucky is about 15 minutes from our location on US Route 60 in Huntington, and Ironton, Ohio is approximately 20 minutes via the river corridor. Customers from Boyd County, Lawrence County, and Cabell County make up a significant portion of our service clientele. We’re here for the whole Tri-State area, not just Huntington.
Ready to Roll? Book Your Pre-Trip Inspection at Moses Auto Mall
Located at 3301 US Route 60, Huntington, WV — serving Ashland KY, Ironton OH, and the entire Tri-State area. Our service team is open Monday–Friday 7:30AM–5:30PM and Saturday 8AM–2PM.
- NHTSA Tire Safety Guidelines — minimum tread depth and sidewall inspection standards
- GM Service Information — battery load test intervals and coolant inspection procedures
- Moses Auto Mall Staff — author and technical review credentials
- Moses Core Values — Hustle, Integrity, Caring


