sick_boy said:
wheres bernes when you need him on subjects like this.......
i have plenty of patience for waiting for these over sized rigs to make it through a trail. im not saying that its right for them to do damage on a trail but ive also seen buggies cause just as much damage as a full size. hell ive seen regular jeeps cause as much damage.
IIRC B's in LVNV.
This is a sore spot with me.
Long before there was even a mailing list I was making a good living building Jeeps TLC's & EB's for other people; way old school stuff by today’s standards. Ran a series of Jeeps all over the PNW, though mostly in OR. Eventually I just burned out on the whole Jeep deal; they are not the be-all and end-all of wheeling rigs. Then again none of the SWB rigs are, most of the time, in-fact they are rather often the most destructive of OR toys precisely because of their size!
Because my family loves wheeling, the Jeep's just got too freeking small. Enter my first fullsize, a 79 Bronco. In the mid 80's I had modified the suspension to the point of having some serious (for the day) articulation. Really people hadn't started doing that back then unless you were running Baja. The way that truck was set up I could and often did just walk through obstacles that well built Heeps, Toyz, etc, had serious trouble with! Not a slam to anyone because I often would embarrass rigs that I'd built!
I basically left this sport more then ten years ago for many reasons, business being one of them; though I have not long been without a 4x4 during that time.
Having just bashed SWB rigs… I agree fully that IF the trail is too narrow then the Fullsize has no business on that trail, period!
You’se all in WA had the good fortune to have pioneers in getting trails designated and maintained. If only OR could have been so blessed, some tried but… In OR many of the “trails†were logging or other access roads originally. Restricting that kind of trail to a Heep width when it was cut by a D8 is politically motivated elitism, or as I refer to it:
“A Jeep Thing.â€
My current toy is a fullsize BB powered POS and I have not unlocked the hubs in more then 6 months because I need 4WD regularly. It is a brute of a leaf-sprung tool and I use it as such. It flat sucks on the trail most of the time (unless it has a load) and so doesn’t get wheeled much. That and braking it skidding logs here on the place is one thing, braking it ‘playing’ on the trail is quite another!
Consequently I have been rounding up the parts to build a smaller trail toy. Not as many might suspect for a narrower rig, rather lighter and therefore more economical. I had planned on running fullsize axles because in 30+years of experience I have found that wider is better (A Pontiac thing?).
Recently I have learned that I will not be doing that because the USFS is/has enacting Track Width regulations. My Highboy on your basic 35â€BFG-Muds is 0.500 too wide. Needless to say I will be narrowing some axles for the new trail toy! To me the interesting thing is that there has been a national trend to building wider. 30-years ago you virtually never saw a CJ or Yod on full size running gear. Today it is rather common. Yet at the same time there is a rather perceptible push to narrow the trails…
B’s ride is a full size “thingâ€. I doubt that there are more then a handful of people or rigs that can hang with it/him comfortably, I sure as hell can’t at the moment. Further I’ll bet that there are few places that it is “Too Wide†unless the trail really was a dirt bike trail that some damn jeepers F’dUp:flipoff:
Trail width really is a prickly subject.
The bikers don’t want the ATV’s and the ATV’rz don’t want the Jeeperz, and the Jeeperz don’t want the Fullsize…
Oh and the Snow Machines don’t want any of em!
I just hope that the conflict does not in the end F’ing it up for everybody… Though right now (at least locally) it looks like it will be the ATV users that are going to screw it up for everyone!
Hubz-in
Chris