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juls wrote:
I am continually crapping my dacks every time im driving across a hill and the cabin rocks and tilts on an angle.
Thats half the fun of 4wd'ing! Learn from experience and try and reduce factors that may influence your COG. ie, no body lift, take off your hard roof if you can, or roof racks.. etc.
were you straddling the ruts? Eg left wheels in center of track? if so, we spend many hours in the dark helpin a dude who rolled his wifes Courier ute on a similar lookin track one day with 3-4 turfors. that was the telling point to buy a elect winch.
were you straddling the ruts? Eg left wheels in center of track? if so, we spend many hours in the dark helpin a dude who rolled his wifes Courier ute on a similar lookin track one day with 3-4 turfors. that was the telling point to buy a elect winch.
how the fawk did u do that? looks like a straight forward trail?
H( * )( * )NZ loves B( * )( * )BIES
if a fat lady falls in the forest do the trees laugh?
[quote="RUFF"]although i didnt mean to, i squealed like a girl :armsup:[/quote]
at a guess he was straddling the ruts because his diff center was dragging on the mount, and either his passenger wheels slipped into the drivers side ruts, or he went too high on the embankment while straddling
Put a strap on it then drive on an angle till it starts to go.This will give you a good idea of how far you can go before it rolls.Dont forget to get some mates hanging of the strap to stop you.
If you feel like a little bit of maths and some drawing this might help you do a rough calculation of the angle you can be on before it tips. Keep in mind the COG will change with lift, exo's or any other mod that shifts weight on a vehicle. As the COG approaches the vertical red line the vehicle becomes less stable and more susceptible to tipping and once it passes the red line it's game over.
The PDF has stability factors for a range of vehicles and although it is American a number of the vehicles are what we have but you may need to know the model name in the US market as it can be different.
It is also interesting to compare the SSF of vehicles such as the Suzuki Sierra(Samurai) which has a supposed rep for tipping easily with something like a Pajero(Montero).