Mine is far from perfect but has I think 120,000 miles on it. I'd love to see a UTV that makes it that far and apparently, a Jeep too. Lol!I run one of them also heat no payments and goes anywear.
Mine is far from perfect but has I think 120,000 miles on it. I'd love to see a UTV that makes it that far and apparently, a Jeep too. Lol!I run one of them also heat no payments and goes anywear.
i'll second that!!! i sold my 2500GMC HD and i ran Wrangler DuraTrax for an Outback with Goodyear Weathermasters winter all season and i wont go back!
1/3 the price and 3x the gas milage.
i drove through snow that would only embarass the truck!
last time at the dealer getting oil and differentail oil changed , i was bragging and super happy at how it goes.
he said that "X" mode rocks ?
Hmmmm.. i played along and never knew i even had it! lol.
hope it snows like "he double l" so i can get to try it!!! it laugh's at 15" snow
he said one guy said the only way he could get it stuck was get it airborne and land in a big drift. aka, hang it up.
i am eye the Wilderness , it needs to strip down the electronic BS and that come to a stop and shut off shit first.
and talk about a comfortable ride!
you can have your jeeps. they beat the shit out of you! yeah, i know "its a jeep thing" lol. turn me back over...
popcorn time!
Merry Christmas all.
The biggest problem with these type of people, I can guarantee that they have no emergency provisions in their car for these situations.Where I live in North Eastern Oregon It is common during the winter while getting off of I-84 at the Mt. Emily turn off to find any brand of import, including Subaru's stuck in the snow that's only 12" deep. Some of the more "I can do this, just more speed" ones will make it a little further in and then high center their car and then sit there until a local comes along and pulls them out using a 4x4 that's actually made to go in deep snow.
When asked why they did it, the answer is always the same, well they can do that on TV. No, what you see on TV is them going down a plowed road at 30mph so they don't get stuck. If you take your import whatever that has 6" of ground clearance maybe, in real snow you will get stuck at some point, ... period.
After 40+ years of pulling those people out of the snow I finally realized that leaving them there until our state troopers came by and called them a tow truck, that they would learn better the next time then to do that since that tow truck cost them $500 or more.
I spent 40+ years of breaking chains, axles, winches,cables and everything else and it was simply time to stop it so I have.
Of course if you chain up your import and you can go further before you high center, ... good luck!
It was a joke which some folks here never get. I live on the high plains of Utah and can't remember the last time I saw any brand of 4X4 off the road stuck.I guess someone just wanted to start a food fight with this thread![]()
I can attest to this. We occasionally get some fair sized snow drifts in our driveway which is about 1200 feet in length. I told my wife to hit them at speed in her Lezbaru (Forester) and she'd punch right through them. One day we had some that were more significant than they had been in the past. She hit the first one at speed and high centered it the car. Tires were 6 inches from touching down. I had to pull it out with the tractor and then plow the road.Lets be honest, You are not driving through 15" of snow with a Subaru. Your front bumper would be plowing snow up into the grill until the radiator was blocked & the engine would overheat. Not only that, you will "high center" with the low ground clearance that Subarus have.
Subaru's are great on paved or fairly smooth roads with 3 or 4" of snow. They are not an "off road" vehicle, nor are they made to drive in 15 or more inches of snow. Just stating the facts.
See bluealtered post on page 6.
Yeah. Pretty small town for sure. -18 at the moment but I have a wood stove and plenty of wood on the porch brother .
Downtown Libby vvv![]()
Not a Jeep fan here. The only way I would own one would be if I lived in the mountains many miles from town or my nearest neighbor. At that, it would be a Wrangler. The rest are even less impressive.It was a joke which some folks here never get. I live on the high plains of Utah and can't remember the last time I saw any brand of 4X4 off the road stuck.
One time when I was heading home for the weekend from college (1975) (Klamath Falls to Tillamook Oregon), we ended up in a white out blizzard on Hwy 58 between Hwy 97 and Oakridge. We came across a bus just leaving a pull out and pulled in not more than 5-8 feet off his bumper (we signaled to him so he knew). Even at that distance we could barely make out those big bus tail lights. Thankfully, the bus with its greater height could make out the contours through shadows of the road and stay on track, we sure couldn't. It was so cold that ice would build up on the wipers so that they were making it worse than better to see. We would have to take turns climbing out the window to bang on the wipers to knock the ice off. Could not afford to stop as we would loose our escort.Best vehicle I had for the snow was an '84 Diesel Suburban 4X4. @ 1/2" lift. There was no stopping that thing. Worst I had was a '79 C10 2WD. It would get stuck in 6" of snow. I've had 2 Sabarus. An '84 GL wagon, turbo, 4WD. And a '96 Outback. Got them both for next to nothing because of bad engines...go figure. '84 had a cracked cylinder head, '96 bad head gaskets. The '96 was good in the snow as long as it was't too deep. The '84 had driver controlled, either on or off, 4wd. In most situations it was better in the snow in 2wd because in 4wd the back and wanted to push out on even the slightest curve.
Had a friend in high school that had '61 Jeep CJ with a soft top. One Autumn he and his dad drove it from North central Ohio up to the Michigan upper peninsula. While there the wipers quit. They drove home in the rain with boot laces tied to the wiper arms, driver and passenger alternately pulling on their respective laces to make the wipers wipe. He told me it was the most miserable 14 hour trip, cold, wet, tired.
Baloney. I drove thru 10" of snow with my 06 Subaru two weeks ago. They have higher ground clearance than you think. My 15 and my girls 24 have even higher ground clearance with the taller tires. I'm the last house on a private road on the side of a small mountain. I have no choice sometimes because I rely on the other people to get their part of the road plowed out which sometimes doesn't happen. I wouldn't make a habit out of driving in 10" but it can be done.Lets be honest, You are not driving through 15" of snow with a Subaru. Your front bumper would be plowing snow up into the grill until the radiator was blocked & the engine would overheat. Not only that, you will "high center" with the low ground clearance that Subarus have.
Subaru's are great on paved or fairly smooth roads with 3 or 4" of snow. They are not an "off road" vehicle, nor are they made to drive in 15 or more inches of snow. Just stating the facts.
See bluealtered post on page 6.
I can’t say this enough. If you are going out in weather conditions that most people shouldn’t drive in, you better have the following in your truck:I will offer another tidbit for those wanting to go 4-wheeling in snow or mud for that matter any off road travel.
If you want to off road, taller skinny tires will help here. Your fat tires isn't going to keep you on top of snow or mud if your rig weighs more than 2800-3000 pounds. A 5-7000lb truck just isn't going to stay on top of anything but dry dirt.
You can to a certain point stay on top of sand by dropping your tire pressure down but you better have compressor to air up again. And a winch no matter how powerful won't get you out of any where if there's nothing to winch to where you are.
When I was younger and looking for a place to get stuck in my truck I carried a 100' two 50' and three 25-35' 3/8 cables to get out with and sometimes it was well into the early mornings before I got out of where I was stuck.
One more and I will stop here, if you have winch it must be double the power of the weight of your rig, more power than that is better. You also need a second (winch) battery that should be a 1000amp battery. and also a five ton or more snatch block so you can double the power of your winch, and never forget a shovel that can get to at least to the middle of under your stuck rig,(you may need to get to both sides of your rig) to get out of your mess. Also a change of clothing because you are going to be laying in the snow to shovel out.
This just some of the price of having fun in the mountains in the snow or mud. Have fun.