โMar-13-2017 11:37 AM
โMar-19-2017 04:28 PM
โMar-19-2017 04:19 PM
โMar-19-2017 03:36 PM
kw/00 wrote:
I have owned both, and will stick with a 4x4. Read a few post ago that someone drove on beach sand with a 2 wheel drive. I don't know how they did not get stuck.... ..
โMar-19-2017 12:45 PM
โMar-19-2017 11:46 AM
โMar-18-2017 07:59 PM
โMar-18-2017 03:26 AM
โMar-17-2017 09:40 PM
โMar-17-2017 08:15 PM
Terryallan wrote:Grit dog wrote:Terryallan wrote:
No you don't need 4x4 to tow. it actually hurts the tow capacity. In 30+ years of towing campers, and boats. I have NEVER needed 4x4, and haven't been stuck, anywhere. even on wet grass. Which I don't understand how that happens, but folks complain about it so I guess it could happen. And you can't use 4x4 on the road any way.
However. IF you want 4x4 then get it. It's your money. and you are the only one you have to please. The only time you would need it is after you unhook, and go play in the sand or something. But running up, and down the road . Nah.
For a guy with so many opinions, you musnt get out much!
Contrary to your belief, there are many locations and situations where no 4wd is a no-go period. Just not the trips to the local state park on a nice summer day....
Been camping for 30 plus years, and towing for 40+ years. Have NEVER needed 4x4 while towing, and I camp at the beach on sand, in the mountains on dirt, grass, what ever. Cross country thru the Rockies, down the Coast highway, thru the Blue Ridge
Could be. That since 4x4 vehicles were virtually nonexistent when I started driving. I learned to drive with out it. There are many DRIVERS that learned to drive with out 4x4. And we went EVERYWHERE we wanted to go with out it. Even out on the beach in heavy sand.
I guess what I'm saying is. It could be a skill thing. Example. A few years ago we had to park the busses in a wet muddy field. I followed the first buss into the field. He made the turn hit some soft mud, and got stuck. I had to suddenly steer around him, and I drove on until I found some hard ground, and stopped there. Why did he get stuck, and not me?? Same field, same mud. It's a skill thing. Its how we were taught.
โMar-17-2017 07:32 PM
IdaD wrote:Terryallan wrote:Grit dog wrote:Terryallan wrote:
No you don't need 4x4 to tow. it actually hurts the tow capacity. In 30+ years of towing campers, and boats. I have NEVER needed 4x4, and haven't been stuck, anywhere. even on wet grass. Which I don't understand how that happens, but folks complain about it so I guess it could happen. And you can't use 4x4 on the road any way.
However. IF you want 4x4 then get it. It's your money. and you are the only one you have to please. The only time you would need it is after you unhook, and go play in the sand or something. But running up, and down the road . Nah.
For a guy with so many opinions, you musnt get out much!
Contrary to your belief, there are many locations and situations where no 4wd is a no-go period. Just not the trips to the local state park on a nice summer day....
Been camping for 30 plus years, and towing for 40+ years. Have NEVER needed 4x4 while towing, and I camp at the beach on sand, in the mountains on dirt, grass, what ever. Cross country thru the Rockies, down the Coast highway, thru the Blue Ridge
Could be. That since 4x4 vehicles were virtually nonexistent when I started driving. I learned to drive with out it. There are many DRIVERS that learned to drive with out 4x4. And we went EVERYWHERE we wanted to go with out it. Even out on the beach in heavy sand.
I guess what I'm saying is. It could be a skill thing. Example. A few years ago we had to park the busses in a wet muddy field. I followed the first buss into the field. He made the turn hit some soft mud, and got stuck. I had to suddenly steer around him, and I drove on until I found some hard ground, and stopped there. Why did he get stuck, and not me?? Same field, same mud. It's a skill thing. Its how we were taught.
I got my 4x4 Ram stuck on my street this winter because we had a good 18-20" of heavy wet snow on the ground that particular day, and our county road department generally doesn't plow residential streets. I was able to get it unstuck with a lot of effort. A 2wd truck would have been undrive-able for literally weeks with the winter we had, skill be damned. I had to pull my wife's AWD Pilot out of getting stuck on our street several times. For our family and the areas we drive and conditions we experience, 4WD/AWD is essential on all of our vehicles. Might explain why one can't find 2WD trucks at dealerships around here outside of a few contractor rigs.
โMar-17-2017 04:29 PM
Terryallan wrote:Grit dog wrote:Terryallan wrote:
No you don't need 4x4 to tow. it actually hurts the tow capacity. In 30+ years of towing campers, and boats. I have NEVER needed 4x4, and haven't been stuck, anywhere. even on wet grass. Which I don't understand how that happens, but folks complain about it so I guess it could happen. And you can't use 4x4 on the road any way.
However. IF you want 4x4 then get it. It's your money. and you are the only one you have to please. The only time you would need it is after you unhook, and go play in the sand or something. But running up, and down the road . Nah.
For a guy with so many opinions, you musnt get out much!
Contrary to your belief, there are many locations and situations where no 4wd is a no-go period. Just not the trips to the local state park on a nice summer day....
Been camping for 30 plus years, and towing for 40+ years. Have NEVER needed 4x4 while towing, and I camp at the beach on sand, in the mountains on dirt, grass, what ever. Cross country thru the Rockies, down the Coast highway, thru the Blue Ridge
Could be. That since 4x4 vehicles were virtually nonexistent when I started driving. I learned to drive with out it. There are many DRIVERS that learned to drive with out 4x4. And we went EVERYWHERE we wanted to go with out it. Even out on the beach in heavy sand.
I guess what I'm saying is. It could be a skill thing. Example. A few years ago we had to park the busses in a wet muddy field. I followed the first buss into the field. He made the turn hit some soft mud, and got stuck. I had to suddenly steer around him, and I drove on until I found some hard ground, and stopped there. Why did he get stuck, and not me?? Same field, same mud. It's a skill thing. Its how we were taught.
โMar-17-2017 02:59 PM
Grit dog wrote:
Terry, I've no doubt that you're probably a very good driver, but the "we don't need no fir bu fir cause we used to walk uphill to school in 2' of snow both ways" sounds like something my dad would have said. Rest his soul, he would have been 75 now......so maybe I answered my own question. He never would buy a 4x4. "Waste of money" he'd say.
I've driven plenty of 2 wheelers. Studded or chains in the winter. But I discovered how much easier and more confidence inspiring a 4x4 is. Not to mention cooler! Lol
I still bet there's places I go that you wouldn't make with a 2 wheeler. Depends how adventurous one is I suppose.
โMar-17-2017 02:59 PM
Grit dog wrote:
But I discovered how much easier and more confidence inspiring a 4x4 is. Not to mention cooler! Lol
.
โMar-17-2017 02:19 PM