โJun-08-2015 07:29 PM
โJun-12-2015 10:16 AM
โJun-12-2015 08:19 AM
Wes Tausend wrote:
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There seems to be some misunderstanding of driving greasy clay roads. The best solution remains tire chains. Nothing else is as practical other than avoiding greasy clay roads altogether.
The best M/T tires will gum up, sometimes with over an inch layer of muck banding the tread face and preventing any more traction than just the oozing mud viscosity affords.
Any other traction conditions are different. Dry sand can be easily navigated by almost any truck as long as it has 4x4 and reasonably wide profile tires. Snow has a high viscosity packed index, and it too will allow navigability with M/T treads, either wide-face floating on deep drifts, or narrow-face bottom-digging into shallow snow cover. Short mud hole traverse works ok with M/T type tires but that short distance is about it. The main downside to M/T tires is they are noisy on the highway and worthless for traveling any distance on a long, muddy road. They gum up and will likely not self-clean in sticky clay mud conditions, especially if moving slow.
So one might ask how the large military vehicle could find traction? Simple, really. The truck is so heavy it digs down to dry base and squirts the mud free of the tread face. The knobs then grab dry ground. The same thing can be accomplished with very narrow face M/T tires on a pick-up. But most people buy fat off-road sizes that float on top... on top of grease providing very little traction. As an example, my winch buddy knew of this caveat and his favorite tire was a very narrow Michelin that dug down in both moderate snow cover and muddy clay roads.
So narrow, digging down tires might sound like the answer. But it so happens that they don't work well in bottomless sand or bottomless mud. A great example of bottomless mud is a super wet plowed field where not even a 4x4 tractor with aggressive treads can always navigate. Then on the other hand, a tractor with tire chains can often climb out on it's own. Which brings up the point that even narrow truck tires will climb out of deep sand if they are equipped with tire chains. Chains simply can't be beat.
Speaking of farm tractors, land anchors like Pull-Pal may be of some use. But they are essentially a one-bottom plow and, I surmise, possibly near useless in the worst buried conditions since a pick-up with moderate traction could easily pull one, leaving a plowed furrow behind it. Three or more might be required, or best, just another parked truck. Then on the other hand, anchors do dig down to hard soil just as I would expect tires chains to do. But, when there is miles of impossible muddy road ahead, tire chains do not require the operator to walk ahead re-setting the anchow every few hundred feet... probably in the rain.
Score one for tire chains. Get wet once to put them on, then ride in the dry cab. ๐
Wes
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โJun-12-2015 07:52 AM
RobertRyan wrote:BurbMan wrote:
Here they are sold as surplus.
This one only has 7200 miles on it, 6x6 drive, CAT diesel, 31,900 GVWR.
It would be interesting to find out why the U.S. army went from a Conventional to Cab Over requirements,. I notice the current one is similar
RobertRyan wrote:transferred wrote:
No doubt SRWs and manuals are the best for getting through mud. 4x4 combined with good TIRES though is the main factor.
DRW's are not very good on rocky roads, I guess mud packing between the duallies would cause problems
โJun-11-2015 06:52 PM
transferred wrote:
No doubt SRWs and manuals are the best for getting through mud. 4x4 combined with good TIRES though is the main factor.
โJun-11-2015 06:41 PM
โJun-11-2015 04:27 PM
โJun-11-2015 04:18 PM
โJun-11-2015 04:14 PM
BurbMan wrote:
Here they are sold as surplus.
This one only has 7200 miles on it, 6x6 drive, CAT diesel, 31,900 GVWR.
โJun-11-2015 03:10 PM
โJun-11-2015 12:14 PM
โJun-11-2015 11:48 AM
โJun-10-2015 05:54 AM
โJun-09-2015 06:05 PM
bcbouy wrote:
land anchor,look it up. any good mud tire throws the mud out.we off roaders all know that.if you buy bfg at's and expect to get through mud,you're dreaming.i live in a coastal rain forest,i know mud.
โJun-09-2015 06:03 PM
bcbouy wrote:
land anchor,look it up. any good mud tire throws the mud out.we off roaders all know that.if you buy bfg at's and expect to get through mud,you're dreaming.i live in a coastal rain forest,i know mud.