GreatWhite
Well-Known Member
went to new york this week and there were lifted truck population was pretty poor the whole time I was there an unleaded superduty and an avalanche ( sorta a truck ) and neither was spectacular


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a new yorker driving a 4x4 in the snow...........
Now thats freakin scary!![]()
Depends where you were in NY. NYC, not much need for a lifted truck or truck of any kind.
Upstate snow belt, and I used to live in Watertown, you really don't want a lifted truck or you'll just flip it that much easier on the snow and ice. Conventional wisdom there is that smaller trucks like Rangers and half-tons go better in the snow than heavier 3/4 and 1 tons. Less overall weight to haul up a hill or provide extra momentum to send you off the road and into the ditch. Also most everybody Upstate is a farmer and a lifted truck just means you've got to lift crap that much higher to get it in the truck. They just don't have much use for it.
The only thing that ever stopped me was visibility, never traction. Sometimes you literally cannot see much past the edge of the hood in broad daylight, or at least at much daylight as there is in a blizzard.
Can you locate NY on a map?a new yorker driving a 4x4 in the snow...........
Now thats freakin scary!![]()
Ditto ...what he saidDepends where you were in NY. NYC, not much need for a lifted truck or truck of any kind.
Upstate snow belt, and I used to live in Watertown, you really don't want a lifted truck or you'll just flip it that much easier on the snow and ice. Conventional wisdom there is that smaller trucks like Rangers and half-tons go better in the snow than heavier 3/4 and 1 tons. Less overall weight to haul up a hill or provide extra momentum to send you off the road and into the ditch. Also most everybody Upstate is a farmer and a lifted truck just means you've got to lift crap that much higher to get it in the truck. They just don't have much use for it.
The only thing that ever stopped me was visibility, never traction. Sometimes you literally cannot see much past the edge of the hood in broad daylight, or at least at much daylight as there is in a blizzard.
![]()
this is oswego after the october storm of 2006 , i think that was 2 days of snow
oswego and that area gets it the worst