N
Nick Williams
Guest
I spent yesterday afternoon on a cave rescue in a field in the middle of the
White Peak. It got progressively wetter as the afternoon wore on and as it
went dark, just as we were packing up, it started to **** down.
At the cave entrance, about a quarter mile across a sheep-grazed field, we
had a variety of vehicles - the police had a couple of Rav 4's, and a 4 x 4
Merc. Sprinter van, the fire service had a 110, the police surgeon had a
RangeRover Sport, DCRO had their (2WD) Iveco rescue van, I had my 90 and the
DCRO first responders had a Subaru estate. Apart from the Michelin X tyres on
my 90 and a set of MT's on the Fire Service 110, everyone else was on road
tyres.
Getting out of the field turned into a right mudbath. Even the farmer's
tractor was having problems by the time we got the last vehicle off the
field. The field was actually pretty flat, but just a few very gentle dips
and hummocks was enough to completely strand most of the vehicles once the
surface had been broken.
I only got stuck once and for a very short period, while attempting to get to
the Rangerover to pull it out. Oh for a winch! Three men pushing for 20 feet
was enough though.
Last night, I completely forgot that one way of increasing traction would
have been to let the tyres on the vehicles down. Stupid, really, but there it
is. I don't have a compressor on the 90 (yet!) but both DCRO and the Fire
service carry bottled air, so re-inflating should not have been too much of
an issue.
So, to the questions:
How much difference does letting the tyres down make under these
circumstances? Does it really work, or is this just an old wive's tale?
Would it help with both road tyres and things with hunkier tread, or is it a
waste of time on road tyres?
What sort of minimum pressure is advisable?
Can one get away with it on tubeless tyres, or should one only try this on
tubes?
What else does one need to know about this technique?
We have a team de-brief on Wednesday night. It would be quite nice to have a
few ideas before then - any comments welcome.
Nick.
White Peak. It got progressively wetter as the afternoon wore on and as it
went dark, just as we were packing up, it started to **** down.
At the cave entrance, about a quarter mile across a sheep-grazed field, we
had a variety of vehicles - the police had a couple of Rav 4's, and a 4 x 4
Merc. Sprinter van, the fire service had a 110, the police surgeon had a
RangeRover Sport, DCRO had their (2WD) Iveco rescue van, I had my 90 and the
DCRO first responders had a Subaru estate. Apart from the Michelin X tyres on
my 90 and a set of MT's on the Fire Service 110, everyone else was on road
tyres.
Getting out of the field turned into a right mudbath. Even the farmer's
tractor was having problems by the time we got the last vehicle off the
field. The field was actually pretty flat, but just a few very gentle dips
and hummocks was enough to completely strand most of the vehicles once the
surface had been broken.
I only got stuck once and for a very short period, while attempting to get to
the Rangerover to pull it out. Oh for a winch! Three men pushing for 20 feet
was enough though.
Last night, I completely forgot that one way of increasing traction would
have been to let the tyres on the vehicles down. Stupid, really, but there it
is. I don't have a compressor on the 90 (yet!) but both DCRO and the Fire
service carry bottled air, so re-inflating should not have been too much of
an issue.
So, to the questions:
How much difference does letting the tyres down make under these
circumstances? Does it really work, or is this just an old wive's tale?
Would it help with both road tyres and things with hunkier tread, or is it a
waste of time on road tyres?
What sort of minimum pressure is advisable?
Can one get away with it on tubeless tyres, or should one only try this on
tubes?
What else does one need to know about this technique?
We have a team de-brief on Wednesday night. It would be quite nice to have a
few ideas before then - any comments welcome.
Nick.