โOct-07-2018 08:32 AM
โOct-19-2018 10:31 AM
โOct-19-2018 10:00 AM
โOct-19-2018 08:38 AM
โOct-19-2018 07:48 AM
4x4ord wrote:
You very obviously have very limited experience with driving in snow and ice. It could very well be that people who don't see snow don't need 4 wheel drive. A two wheel drive truck in snow is useless.
โOct-17-2018 07:49 PM
โOct-17-2018 07:43 PM
โOct-17-2018 07:21 PM
fj12ryder wrote:
I meant to say Idaho, but stuck Utah in there by mistake. I figure Idaho gets more deep snow than Utah.
โOct-17-2018 06:34 PM
โOct-17-2018 08:52 AM
โOct-15-2018 10:04 AM
Super_Dave wrote:
I live in Utah and have never used 4 wheel drive in the snow. The roads are kept very clear here when it snows. The only time I use 4 wheel is at one lake we go to with a slick boat ramp when wet.
โOct-15-2018 09:16 AM
fj12ryder wrote:
If I lived somewhere that received a lot of snow, Utah, the mountains of Colorado, the northeast, etc. I would most likely spend the money for a 4WD vehicle, but someplace that only occasionally gets 6-8" of snow it's just a waste of money.
โOct-15-2018 08:45 AM
โOct-15-2018 06:03 AM
fj12ryder wrote:
"A two wheel drive truck in snow is useless."
Oh bosh. Of course they aren't useless, they don't get around as good as a 4WD obviously, but will do just fine in moderate snow. Some weight in the back and knowing how to drive in snow helps a lot, and a locking differential helps too.
โOct-14-2018 04:02 PM
rhagfo wrote:I grew up in Iowa, and now live in Missouri. I've rarely found a need for 4WD, in all the many years of snow. We used to go out in our rear wheel drive cars and do some really stupid stuff and very rarely got stuck enough to need someone with a tractor to pull us out. 4WD vehicles were very much a rarity in the 50's and 60's but we actually got around pretty well in the winter.fj12ryder wrote:
"A two wheel drive truck in snow is useless."
Oh bosh. Of course they aren't useless, they don't get around as good as a 4WD obviously, but will do just fine in moderate snow. Some weight in the back and knowing how to drive in snow helps a lot, and a locking differential helps too.
There are two parts to driving in snow, go and control!
Yes, you can do a decent job of going with a 4X2, but for great control you really need 4X4. When the front wheels are driving and not plowing control is much better. That and most likely with a 4X2 you will likely loose traction in the most inconvenient place, like half way up a grade. With 4X2 you need to stop and chain up, with 4X4 just engage 4X4! I consider it cheap insurance.