Stuck caravan on a sand dune - how to recover!

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  • Опубликовано: 12 сен 2024
  • #tractionramps #maxtrax #sanddriving
    It's tough to tow trailers in sand, and sometimes you just can't get over the top. So what do you do? Here's one solution, takes a while but it really does work!
    Post questions as comments!
    Follow me on Facebook:
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Комментарии • 67

  • @jerrymyahzcat
    @jerrymyahzcat 24 дня назад +1

    Some suggest you should also put traction boards under the caravan wheels.
    Should carry a pair of boards per axle.

    • @L2SFBC
      @L2SFBC  23 дня назад

      Yes, I usually carry 8, but not that time.

  • @michaeldallimore8590
    @michaeldallimore8590 2 года назад +2

    Never thought of driving back onto the traction boards. Useful tip thanks.

    • @L2SFBC
      @L2SFBC  2 года назад

      It's a very useful trick...if you can't make it up a dune in one go despite lots of #sendit, then that'll get you to the top, just takes time and patience.

  • @ChristianJamesK
    @ChristianJamesK Год назад +1

    Great videos on sand driving. I'll be towing a Forbes 13+ on sand so this information gives me a great headstart. Another good one!

    • @L2SFBC
      @L2SFBC  Год назад

      Thanks - the main sand one is this ruclips.net/video/K_MdA2pL41A/видео.html

  • @KevinHeadlam-Tasmania
    @KevinHeadlam-Tasmania 2 года назад +1

    Good information Robert
    Now my 2 bobs worth
    - Endeavour to keep maximum ground clearance under the vehicle (including the Van/Trailer)
    - To this end minimise the sand bulldozing effect of each tyre - an old carpet is of great assistance also
    -Winching - a well installed sand anchor is fantastic in this instance and has minimal environmental impact

    • @L2SFBC
      @L2SFBC  2 года назад

      Yes, you'll notice I never bogged it deeply, always gave up early! As for winching, I have found sand anchors to be ineffective, but retain an open mind...

    • @BenMitro
      @BenMitro 2 года назад +1

      The carpet idea sounds like a good one. I suppose a length of carpet 300mm wide? Would you use it in conjunction with maxtrax or on its own...total newbie here, so excuse my ignorant questions.

  • @cmarico
    @cmarico 2 года назад +1

    Track to number two rocks I think. Beautiful area, was there in January. That dune is a doozy, caught plenty out when we were there.

    • @L2SFBC
      @L2SFBC  2 года назад

      Correct, that's the track. It is easy without a trailer...shouldn't cause anyone problems at the right pressure, and there's a beach bypass if you really need it.

  • @ian9toes
    @ian9toes Год назад +1

    I recently did something similar just as an exercise. It was a short steep dune with no run up due to the very square edged entrance. I was on 20 PSI and figured Maxtrax were quicker than airing down and back up again. Plus I wanted to test my theory, which I’ve never seen anyone do.
    My technique was to back down slightly from the bogged position, just enough to get out of the hole, without any boards behind. Then I was able to shove the boards in front without any digging . It worked a treat and I personally believe it worked better than the technique being shown here.

    • @L2SFBC
      @L2SFBC  Год назад

      Thanks, good info. I have used the same technique, and in fact it works without Maxtrax, I'll do a video on it in a while. Last time I used it was with a trailer on the back. It did not work in this situation shown as the car immediately bogged.

  • @79VALHAL
    @79VALHAL 9 месяцев назад +1

    Great and informative vid as usual. Thank you.. and yeah, patience and patience is key… and agree, multiple sets of Maxtrax preferable. Worst recovery we did in a group we used 14 I think… ;)

    • @L2SFBC
      @L2SFBC  9 месяцев назад

      Fourteen has to be a record!!!

  • @nickjennings8317
    @nickjennings8317 2 года назад +1

    Hi Robert, another very informative video, many thanks.

    • @L2SFBC
      @L2SFBC  2 года назад

      Very welcome

  • @veryaware
    @veryaware 2 года назад +1

    Nice and practical. In roughly the same conditions have you tried: back onto the boards at the rear, and then second pair of tracks infront of the rear wheels only? I suspect with the trailer hitch weight and stuff in the tray, the weight at back, with relatively light front may have been okay to get a longer movement this way. Obviously, if it fails reverting to the demonstrated last resort method.
    PS. I bought my second pair of tracks after being run off the inland sand track on Bribie (extremely fast car came around a corner and I swerved to the outside of a very soft corner with trailer and was very bogged). The jeep driver didn't stop and it took me about half an hour to get back onto the track. So yes agree having four is good if towing it really doesn't take much more space than two. Anyhow, love your work as always - thanks.

    • @L2SFBC
      @L2SFBC  2 года назад +1

      Yes, I've tried every combination I can think of over the years. Each has their place...the point is to make people consider something other than tracks-in-front-drive-on.

  • @Nonunsnone
    @Nonunsnone Год назад +1

    Thank you for this video.

  • @BenMitro
    @BenMitro 2 года назад +1

    Last resort tactics - very good info, thanks Robert.
    I wonder if longer tracks would help. It seems to me they could make them longer without having to make them any thicker since the pressure area will remain the same regardless how long they are. The extra length will make for shorter recoveries but yet, no one makes them.

    • @L2SFBC
      @L2SFBC  2 года назад +1

      I think the length of Maxtrax is perfect. Yes, longer tracks would be better when actually recovering...at the front of the vehicle. Any longer and it'd be difficult to fit them ahead of the rear wheel and behind the front wheel. Also, physically carrying them and storing them is easy at the current length. So I think the answer is carry 6 if you want more, or more likely, spread them around a group.

    • @johnleaste828
      @johnleaste828 2 года назад +2

      Maxtrax are made to exactly that length in other to fit on a standard pallet. First version was sightly longer but freight to the retailer was an issue.

    • @L2SFBC
      @L2SFBC  2 года назад +1

      That is what the founder said when I interviewed him - the video is on my channel!

  • @robertheuzinkveld8549
    @robertheuzinkveld8549 2 года назад +1

    Brilliant buddy. I take my hat off

    • @L2SFBC
      @L2SFBC  2 года назад

      Thank you...please share 👍

  • @7kyro
    @7kyro 2 года назад +2

    Nice video as always.
    6:34 I would be interested in seeing you review some ground anchors to winch off of. Redrock 4x4 makes a great one. “Deadman off-road” has been featured for sand recovery in AUS and can even be used as a tree saver. Firemen also use a technique for low angle rescues using 3 stakes in a line placed in the ground pretensioned together with tubular webbing.

    • @L2SFBC
      @L2SFBC  2 года назад +1

      Not had great experience with sand anchors but retain an open mind...

  • @chikowhitey
    @chikowhitey Год назад +1

    thanks mate....great vid

    • @L2SFBC
      @L2SFBC  Год назад

      Glad you enjoyed it please share!

  • @technopsychobedlam
    @technopsychobedlam Год назад +2

    Not dragging a caravan through these kinds of areas would save the problem entirely. I am seeing signs increasingly telling people not to drag caravans through dunes...cos, you know, its not a great idea. Just because its possible doesn't mean you should

    • @L2SFBC
      @L2SFBC  Год назад

      Trailers are allowed, and I didn't cause anyone any trouble so it worked. But yes your wider point I agree with.

    • @joegoedhart1259
      @joegoedhart1259 8 месяцев назад

      Unless its a boat. Good on you

    • @wokbok43
      @wokbok43 3 месяца назад

      Piss off hero

  • @nickjennings8317
    @nickjennings8317 2 года назад +2

    I don’t have any experience of use of traction mats but gather that The Max Trax or ARB Treds are the best options, What would be your choice of Brands?

    • @L2SFBC
      @L2SFBC  2 года назад +2

      Maxtrax or the later TREDs. Not used the others but any name brand should be fine. DO NOT BUY THE CHEAP ONES!!!!!!!!!!

    • @nickjennings8317
      @nickjennings8317 2 года назад +1

      Thanks, I have traded a couple of pairs of Max Traxs recently, they are very good quality. Also just obtained The Indeflate , looks like the business too.

    • @chrisgrenzner9337
      @chrisgrenzner9337 2 года назад

      Ronny Dahl - 4 Wheeling Australia, did a comparison on traction boards that you might find interesting.

  • @johnpaine7609
    @johnpaine7609 2 года назад +1

    Thanks

    • @L2SFBC
      @L2SFBC  2 года назад

      Thanks for the SuperThanks John, that's my first for this video and second-ever!

  • @rich9903
    @rich9903 2 года назад +1

    Hi Robert. What would you suggest as the best technique if there was a long line of (very frustrated) campers lined up behind you as well as the same for oncoming traffic (ala Ngkala Rocks Fraser Is)? I doubt that all drivers will be as patient and forgiving with one using this technique especially if a caravan was involved 🙃
    That said, in the greatest of Aussie traditions, most people would probably lend a hand in the circumstances 🤙

    • @L2SFBC
      @L2SFBC  2 года назад +1

      First off I wouldn't tow in a crowded, narrow area if at all possible, or do anything else to impede others eg filiming or driver training. In this case, nobody was around whole evening and only saw 3 cars the whole weekend - I'm familar with that area and it's never been busy offpeak, even peak isn't too bad. But if you had to do a quick recovery then using others is good. There is also a beach bypass which I decided not to take but others could. So, no inconvience for anyone else. The technique is really a last resort.

    • @alexdevries7594
      @alexdevries7594 2 года назад +1

      Best technique for crowded beach? Ask for help. Hands down the best. Another vehicle to assist in the situation shown above would have it done far more quickly. But what Robert has shown above is how you can do it if there isn’t anyone else around.

    • @juanmiguel8120
      @juanmiguel8120 Год назад +1

      Yeah people will be backed up to ya faster than you can ask to get ya outta everyone’s way plus what he said don’t be a numpty an attempt it where it’s busy

    • @L2SFBC
      @L2SFBC  Год назад

      That's the thing if it was busy you'd have help and be on your way not needing the technique. If it wasn't busy nobody to inconvenience and you'd need it.

    • @bernburn11
      @bernburn11 Год назад +1

      @@L2SFBC Great info with real footage. thank you. So if there was no way for the vehicles stacking up behind you to get around and supply a winch point, how could the gathering crowd help. Women and children laid in front of the tack mats could provide further traction, but.... But seriously, it's a genuine question.

  • @Malc664
    @Malc664 2 года назад +1

    What if you had put all four traction boards at the rear wheels? Maybe go a bit further Idk.

    • @L2SFBC
      @L2SFBC  2 года назад +1

      Tried that didn't work, but it is nevertheless a technique to try in different conditions with a different car. It has worked other times. Usualy though one board per tyre is best.

  • @Ozjourney
    @Ozjourney 2 года назад +1

    Would be interested to put 2 boards on each rear wheel, forward and back of the tyre, given the weight on the rear axle

    • @L2SFBC
      @L2SFBC  2 года назад

      That didn't work that time!

    • @Ozjourney
      @Ozjourney 2 года назад

      @@L2SFBC thats's good to know

    • @L2SFBC
      @L2SFBC  2 года назад

      I wouldn't rule it out. Always always keep an open mind, but, conversely, don't persist with a method that isn't working. It's hard to do that in the heat of the moment. I might do something on the psychology of recovery.

  • @ab7406
    @ab7406 2 года назад +2

    Winch anchor or waste hours moving boards.

    • @L2SFBC
      @L2SFBC  2 года назад

      sadly, winch anchors are hard to find in sand

    • @ab7406
      @ab7406 2 года назад +1

      ? Winch cable attached to find, the old years we buried the spare to get up a sand track with tinny and under powered 4x4

  • @user-qx2nr6xo3c
    @user-qx2nr6xo3c 11 месяцев назад +1

    UK pebble beaches are much more tricky!

    • @L2SFBC
      @L2SFBC  11 месяцев назад

      I'd suggest not...the finer the sand, the harder the going

    • @user-qx2nr6xo3c
      @user-qx2nr6xo3c 11 месяцев назад

      @@L2SFBC the pebbles are harder mate trust me. Imagine wet marbles that are 6' deep. The slightest wheelspin, results in sinking up to the Dana axle. I did this at Weybourne beach in North Norfolk. Check it on Google maps images. The tide was coming in and it was an unforgettable incident. This was in a 1964 Land Rover with a rear traction aid too (Taiwan Trutrack)
      The method that saved the day was some digging out and, very gentle driving backwards and then gently forward and out. It was up to the tree sliders and the transfer box in the end. It's like very heavy quicksand. I like the videos a lot and I am subscribed. Thanks for the response

    • @user-qx2nr6xo3c
      @user-qx2nr6xo3c 11 месяцев назад +1

      P.s. the pebbles are rounded flint.

  • @Sea1fly
    @Sea1fly Год назад

    Tire pressure lowered to?

    • @L2SFBC
      @L2SFBC  Год назад

      covered in the video - I can't recall exactly but lowered them further and still didn't work, hence the ramps

    • @joegoedhart1259
      @joegoedhart1259 8 месяцев назад

      Do not lower the trailer tyres. Ask any bricklayer that has pushed a brick barrow or wheelbarrow full of mud on a WA building site. Less pressure means more drag. We always had our barrow tyres pumped hard. They were heaps easier to push over the sand.

    • @peterbussau9775
      @peterbussau9775 8 месяцев назад

      ​@@joegoedhart1259 incorrect, you definitely lower trailer tyre pressures in soft sand