On 2006-07-28, Austin Shackles <
[email protected]> wrote:
> couple of thoughts. there's a bloke about 7 minutes in who's in a very
> silly place, immediately downslope of an unstable vehicle. If the driver
> had accidentally applied too much boot or lock and rolled it, that bloke was
> underneath.
TBH it looked to me like he was behind it rather than directly to the
side, it's hard to judge with cameras especially when you don't know
the zoom settings (the greater the zoom, the more flattening the
perspective).
> other general thought - the penalties for getting it wrong are usually a lot
> more damaging than on softer terrain.
Possibly, it's a bit swings and roundabouts, mud gives less grip which
gives less control, roll-bars can sink into soft ground, and turning a
vehicle over in water is not a good thing. Plus of course there's the
quite scary attitude to vehicle recovery usually seen on the mud sites.
That course in the vid wasn't too extreme either, I didn't see
anything in there that I felt was particularly dangerous, but would be
fun for sure. After all if unmodified humvee H2s can handle it then
how hard can it be! I've seen H1s off-road and they were far from
impressive, the h2s aren't any better.
> mind, I don't really, myself, see the point of gratuitous impassable
> mudholes, except for winch-and-recovery training.
No, mud plugging is dull, and if you don't regard your vehicle as
disposable then you have to clean it off the underside every time,
which is very messy. Plus of course for those of us with drum brakes
it's expensive!
--
Blast off and strike the evil Bydo empire!