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Winter wheeling with wife = new winch

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Offline Shredder

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Winter wheeling with wife = new winch
« on: December 05, 2005, 09:02:17 PM »
Well the wife wanted to go for a ride in the winter wonderland. She didn't have to twist my arm. We took the Tracker on a trail along a ridge overlooking a stream. She was shooting pictures out the window as I drove. She asked, "Can the tracker take us down by the water?" "Sure", I said although uneasy about the condition of the snow. So down a steep trail we went in 4 Lo 1st gear. We drove slowly along the creek on a slightly off-camber trail. Everything seemed ok until the trail dead ended with no other way out.  :-[



I realized things wouldn't be easy as i slid and spun trying to turn around on the narrow bank. As I began the off camber ascent things didnt go well. It seemed I was going forward and sideways at the same rate of speed. Oops. Now off the trail I drove around between trees trying to find a different place to climb out. All the while feeling the tires sink and spin in the soft spots.



I started wondering what it would cost to get a tow truck to come back in here.  ::)  Not willing to give up I struggled to get back up on to the trail. With the help of the HiLift, a chain, a strap and a shovel the Tracker was finally aimed at the top.



I cleared the packed snow away from in front of the tires with my little shovel for about 20 feet to create a launching pad. Got in, took a deep breath, slowly let the clutch out and then punched it. Rooster tails flying off all four and with cheers from my wife we blasted to the top. As we walked back down to gret my recovery gear she said, "Maybe you should get one of those winch things." YES, the words I wanted to hear.  ;D Now just need to pick one I can afford that will do the job.
 
'96 Astro Van 2wd, +10 Overland, 32s, Tow Rig
'96 Tracker LWB 4x4, +4.5 Calmini/Boondox, +3 Boondox BL, 31x10.50 (wife rolled)
'93 Sidekick LWB 2x4, 235s, +3 Boondox Suspension kit, 4wd swap 2b
'91 Tracker SWB, Toy axles, YJ Springs, Boondox Swap Kit, 31x10.50

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Offline wildgoody

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Re: Winter wheeling with wife = new winch
« Reply #1 on: December 05, 2005, 09:25:02 PM »
Nice story, go going you had recovery gear
with you, many worry about that a little too
late.

I think some more aggresive tire would of
helped get you out of there, the pics show
your tires packed full of snow and looking like
slicks  ;)

Wild
Real Trucks Are Built, Not Bought,
And Chrome Don't Get Ya Home.  

An armed man is a citizen. An unarmed man is a subject.

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Offline Shredder

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Re: Winter wheeling with wife = new winch
« Reply #2 on: December 05, 2005, 09:39:24 PM »
Actually those tires are fairly aggressive for all-terrains and seem to clear well. That snow was that really easy packing slippery stuff. My wife and I fell down several times just trying to walk on the trail.  :-[   The pictures don't show how steep it really is. ...... Really it was all a ploy to get me that winch  ;) HeHe

'96 Astro Van 2wd, +10 Overland, 32s, Tow Rig
'96 Tracker LWB 4x4, +4.5 Calmini/Boondox, +3 Boondox BL, 31x10.50 (wife rolled)
'93 Sidekick LWB 2x4, 235s, +3 Boondox Suspension kit, 4wd swap 2b
'91 Tracker SWB, Toy axles, YJ Springs, Boondox Swap Kit, 31x10.50

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Offline wildgoody

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Re: Winter wheeling with wife = new winch
« Reply #3 on: December 05, 2005, 09:52:28 PM »
Not bad, but this is what I call an All Terrain  ;D



Real Trucks Are Built, Not Bought,
And Chrome Don't Get Ya Home.  

An armed man is a citizen. An unarmed man is a subject.

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Offline Dihnekis

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Re: Winter wheeling with wife = new winch
« Reply #4 on: December 05, 2005, 10:03:20 PM »
Not bad, but this is what I call an All Terrain  ;D






Those are nice if you don't like being able to hear your stereo  ;D

Anyway that sounds like a fun story, good thing you had your gear with your or you would have been in trouble. Also always good to have a few 4x4 friends on speed dial. That is my solution to not having the cash to buy any recovery stuff yet. Hopefully a hi lift and winch kit for it will come for christmas  :).

Only had to call a friend twice now, last one was pretty bad (front axle and wheels sitting on a log and off the ground), had to call a jeep to come out and yank me off.

First one I was stuck on the beach at night with my girlfriend in some ridiculous sand, but managed to get some life guards to push me out just as my friends got there. That was a 2wd tracker on 195/75s though.
1988 Suzuki Samurai

31" BFGs, SPOA, 5.14 Calmini Tcase gears, DOM cage, rock sliders, spidertrax wheels

1.6L, header, and 2" flowmaster exhaust coming soon

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Offline wildgoody

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Re: Winter wheeling with wife = new winch
« Reply #5 on: December 05, 2005, 10:15:05 PM »
Actually with four of those puppies on  the
Trucklet I would call it quadraphonic stereo

Wait until you start wearing the fronts down,
then the harmonics kick in, as the tires go in
and out of sync

BTW my stock Pioneer Cassette Deck has
enough volume to hear over the 4 tire chorus
Real Trucks Are Built, Not Bought,
And Chrome Don't Get Ya Home.  

An armed man is a citizen. An unarmed man is a subject.

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Offline mrfuelish

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Re: Winter wheeling with wife = new winch
« Reply #6 on: December 05, 2005, 11:47:16 PM »
should you realy be calling your wife a winch  ;D
1987,1988,1988,1990 samurai's,  1953 m38a1,  1996 x-90,blue.1996 x-90 red.1994 2 door tracker.   only Dead Fish go with the flow.                No Hairy Nosed Wombats were ran over on the trail today.       My ZUK is Xenophobic.

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mudfkr

Re: Winter wheeling with wife = new winch
« Reply #7 on: December 06, 2005, 12:05:35 AM »
I like that first photo looks pretty cool kicked over a bit and with the white back ground.

I have a winch but I always have a few good friends Phone numbers programed in the cell too just incase I need back up  :).


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Offline ShawnQ

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Re: Winter wheeling with wife = new winch
« Reply #8 on: December 06, 2005, 06:24:46 AM »
A new winch would be awesome...but those pics are great also!

Man, it froze for the first time all year last night here in TX...wish I had some snow to play in! (but only for a day or two, you can keep that white stuff all winter  ;D )

SQ
'88 Samurai - SPOA Lift, Stock 1.3L, 235/75-R15's
'04 Dodge Ram 2500 Cummins - 4wd, 2" leveling kit, Off Road Package

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Offline Shredder

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Re: Winter wheeling with wife = new winch
« Reply #9 on: December 06, 2005, 07:28:21 AM »
Hopefully a hi lift and winch kit for it will come for christmas  :).

They are handy. I have used one for years when wheeling in the vans. Saved my |removethispart|@$$ several times. Only move you about 3' and then you have to reset it all. Usually that is all you need to get some footing again. Glad I didn't have to HiLift winch it all the way out. Good exercise though.

I keep the base off mine and have a shackle on each end of the bar. I hook a long chain to the rig and through the upper shackle to adjust slack. I use a 50' strap on the jack part with a hitch pin to keep it from slipping off hook the other end to a tree, etc. Works good like that. I just added gloves to my gear bag since I froze my hands on this adventure.  ;)

should you realy be calling your wife a winch  ;D

If she only knew what kind of a new winch I really wanted.   :o  J/K

I like that first photo looks pretty cool kicked over a bit and with the white back ground.

I have a winch but I always have a few good friends Phone numbers programed in the cell too just incase I need back up  :).

I thought for awhile on making a call but no one has a winch that could have reached me down there. If they came down then we both would have been stuck. The pictures do not show how steep it is and the snow made it really bad. But it was fun.  ;D
'96 Astro Van 2wd, +10 Overland, 32s, Tow Rig
'96 Tracker LWB 4x4, +4.5 Calmini/Boondox, +3 Boondox BL, 31x10.50 (wife rolled)
'93 Sidekick LWB 2x4, 235s, +3 Boondox Suspension kit, 4wd swap 2b
'91 Tracker SWB, Toy axles, YJ Springs, Boondox Swap Kit, 31x10.50

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Offline reb

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Re: Winter wheeling with wife = new winch
« Reply #10 on: December 06, 2005, 10:37:18 AM »
Looks like a lot of fun.  I used to carry chains for all four corners on my other 4wds.  They got me out of several spots like that.  Looks like yours is lifted enough to handle them.  I don't think my stock sidekick has enough room though.

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mudfkr

Re: Winter wheeling with wife = new winch
« Reply #11 on: December 06, 2005, 11:22:48 AM »
The pictures do not show how steep it is and the snow made it really bad. But it was fun.  ;D
[/quote

What is it that make photos not portray how steep it really is ?

I know some times when I've been out wheeling we've taken photos on really step stuff that you have a problem standing on never mind trying to drive on it then when you look at the pic's it looks like you could drive a Toyota Echo down it ?

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Offline cj

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Re: Winter wheeling with wife = new winch
« Reply #12 on: December 06, 2005, 12:39:24 PM »
Just curious how much you air down to for driving in the deeper fresh snow. I find that when I drop it to about 8-10psi it works pretty good.

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Offline crikeymike

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Re: Winter wheeling with wife = new winch
« Reply #13 on: December 06, 2005, 03:29:12 PM »
I was in some slippery snow this weekend (although it wasn't too slippery), but i went ahead and threw a set of cable chains i had on the front wheels.  They made all the difference in the world.  We were heading up an incline and kept having to pull over for people coming down and getting stuck.  I was sick of slipping when stopping, so i put the chains on the front and felt 100% more traction.  I'm going to invest in another set for the back and get the actual chain chains this time, then i won't be so hesitant to go up in the hills with just 1 other vehicle (never by myself in snow).  I'm running BFG mt's and they were working fine, but with as many people that were on the trail we were on hunting down xmas trees, it was packing to ice, and with the frustration of moving out of stock vehicles way (AWD mini vans, volvo's and stock rovers and cruisers), i didn't want to be the one getting stuck or slipping into a bank or off a slope.

I'm getting a winch this week it looks like.  A hand winch (tirfor type) can be most useful for snow cause it always seems that you end up more off the trail than on it, so pulling sideways can be most helpful.
1993 4-door Sidekick
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Offline Shredder

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Re: Winter wheeling with wife = new winch
« Reply #14 on: December 06, 2005, 04:51:31 PM »
Just curious how much you air down to for driving in the deeper fresh snow. I find that when I drop it to about 8-10psi it works pretty good.

I know, I know I should have been running them softer but, it was supposed to be just a quick trip through the forest so I didn't air down at all. I thought about it after I got in trouble but since it had such an icy under layer I wasn't too confident soft tires were going to help that much. Besides my hands were already frozen and air rushing past them for 15 minutes to air down did not sound fun.  :-\ Besides I don't have one of those Power Tanks or onboard compressors so airing back up for the ride home would be dificult. BTW- Why do those little "scuba" tanks cost so much?
'96 Astro Van 2wd, +10 Overland, 32s, Tow Rig
'96 Tracker LWB 4x4, +4.5 Calmini/Boondox, +3 Boondox BL, 31x10.50 (wife rolled)
'93 Sidekick LWB 2x4, 235s, +3 Boondox Suspension kit, 4wd swap 2b
'91 Tracker SWB, Toy axles, YJ Springs, Boondox Swap Kit, 31x10.50