Grrrrrr
Technician, Bodgit & Scarper Ltd
- Posts
- 19,784
- Location
- Buckinghamshire, UK. ('95 DT)
Hi all,
I've heard a few people "disrespect" the P38's off-road capability. Well, here's a little tale for you.
Today I went logging in the hills. I had normal motorway road tyres on (18"). It was wet, slippy (mud/grass/bluebells), on a steep slope. Rough ground and tree-stumps, the lot. I filled up the back with about a ton and a half of wood (engine running, shut the tailgate once in a while to let her level out) and my mate filled his new Mitsubishi glam-cab thing (managed about a ton in his, max). He tried to get out and he was in trouble. He had his diff locks on, the lot. Then it started to bottom out with the weight in the back.
Pressure's on. This is going to be nasty. No winch, road tyres. I didn't even have a decent rope. Slipped the Rangie into low ratio (already in extended ride-height to get over the stumps) and set off. Didn't even notice the conditions. Might as well have been parking in town. Straight out and straight down towards civilisation. On the road she handled as well as ever. On unloading I had to put the key in a few times to self-level before the arse went too high but otherwise no problems at all.
Say what you like about Chelsea tractors etc but I doubt there's many 4x4s out there that could do that load in that terrain as well. Absolutely incredible bit of kit. WELL CHUFFED! And one mate wishing he hadn't blown all his cash on a brand new whatever it is.
I've heard a few people "disrespect" the P38's off-road capability. Well, here's a little tale for you.
Today I went logging in the hills. I had normal motorway road tyres on (18"). It was wet, slippy (mud/grass/bluebells), on a steep slope. Rough ground and tree-stumps, the lot. I filled up the back with about a ton and a half of wood (engine running, shut the tailgate once in a while to let her level out) and my mate filled his new Mitsubishi glam-cab thing (managed about a ton in his, max). He tried to get out and he was in trouble. He had his diff locks on, the lot. Then it started to bottom out with the weight in the back.
Pressure's on. This is going to be nasty. No winch, road tyres. I didn't even have a decent rope. Slipped the Rangie into low ratio (already in extended ride-height to get over the stumps) and set off. Didn't even notice the conditions. Might as well have been parking in town. Straight out and straight down towards civilisation. On the road she handled as well as ever. On unloading I had to put the key in a few times to self-level before the arse went too high but otherwise no problems at all.
Say what you like about Chelsea tractors etc but I doubt there's many 4x4s out there that could do that load in that terrain as well. Absolutely incredible bit of kit. WELL CHUFFED! And one mate wishing he hadn't blown all his cash on a brand new whatever it is.