Lefty
Well-Known Member
Perfect. Maybe throw some sand in there too, just in case you get stuck.How about a refrigerator? Will that do for winter weight?![]()
Welcome Visitor! Please take a few seconds and Register
for our forum. Even if you don't want to post, you can still 'Like' and react to posts.
Perfect. Maybe throw some sand in there too, just in case you get stuck.How about a refrigerator? Will that do for winter weight?![]()
Those are illegal in most states unless you are a US Mail carrier
AJ
But that takes away room for beer and deer meat….Perfect. Maybe throw some sand in there too, just in case you get stuck.
I might put a couple 100lb bags of sand in the wife's truck, it is 4wd but every little bit helps. I usually do not put any in mine and don't feel that I need it.
My F250 is absolutely terrible in the snow though. That one needs weight, and a lot of it. I went out breaking trail last weekend in it and it was all over the place... even with a pair of full size Bronco axles, a 200lb log and two Christmas trees in the back. I'm guessing that was about 800lbs +/- and not enough. Mud tires don't help matters. I hate driving that truck in the winter... empty is too light and it slides all over, loaded down is too much and it just digs in and sinks. There is no happy medium. I hope I never get stuck in that fat pig.
They are a seasonal item here, legal from like October to May or something like that.
Funny. We had an F25o at work too. Same damn problem, even on wet streets.
Somebody here a while back pointed out that mud tires are crap in snow. I seem to recall him saying that All Terrain tires were better. Personally, a studded winter tire would be my choice.
Somebody here a while back pointed out that mud tires are crap in snow. I seem to recall him saying that All Terrain tires were better. Personally, a studded winter tire would be my choice.
You are right. Wider is better, but only up to a point. Too wide can make the problem worse. A friend of mine made that mistake on his Mustang Cobra. he keeps it garaged over the winter.Yeah they are typically not great. I think if you air down it helps... in deep snow I have always had the best luck with narrow ATs and even street tires. They don't dig in.
Contrary to what you would think, big huge wide balloon tires don't work well in snow either. My buddy had a set of worn out 40x14.5x15 Gumbo Monster Mudders on his early Bronco - that thing would just sink in, my Ranger on 35" BFG MTs would run circles around it.
That's what I did. Yes it made a big difference.I put about 250lbs in the back last winter. I was more impressed on how it improved the ride.
I was offered a 4X8 sheet of 3/8" thick steel. Cutting it to fit the bed would bring it to about 300lbs. Still contemplating that.
I've been running studded winters on my truck for a year now. Not every day but fairly regular. Studs are still fine. I don't understand why some provinces and states have a rule about not running them in summer. It doesn't damage the road. And it's much more likely a stone will get launched than a stud.
That was probably me. I agree with the winter tires being the better choice.
The studs are going to depend where you live. If you don’t have enough regular snow cover on the roads, the studs won’t last long. Where you live, the studs would be a no brainer.