Man! Some of these cats don’t give their truck any chance at all. This one goes into it moving slower than pond water but he’s full throttle AFTER he’s stuck.
0:30 a dirtbike is the best proof of horse power being part of the equation of avoiding getting bogged. Horse power and suspension good enough to enable the use of that horse power. Horse power and suspension make up for the fact it’s only driven by one axel.
@@CruiserBrahNo, I have seen lot of videos and the more I watch, the more people insist in drive in sand like they do on roads. Is the same here in Brazil. All the time we have to tow a new "off roader"!
Nissan xtrail passed by using road tires without any issues, But the navara, using off road tires got stuck... hmm... Lack of momentum may be? What do you guys think?
There seems to be something of a schadenfreude culture at play with people sitting off watching other people have burial parties aboard their motor cars. It probably comes second best to watching folk doing their competitive thing at flooded river crossings. Witnessing the variation in skill sets on the sand is quite educational. It puts a whole new complexion on the aviation forced landing descriptor "controlled decent into terrain".
It may have helped IF the Navarro (whatever that is) wasn't trying to dig to Newfoundland, and the Hilux wasn't a lifetime member of the 45psi club!! The second Hilux got it done though!
Good time to let ya tyres down just before the sand covers the windows and then you WOULDNT get out of car regardless. Of coarse unless you carry a shovel in side on the front seat next to ya passenger. 😁😁😁😁😁😂😂😂😂🙋
I don't know why driving on beaches like this is still tolerated as most places in Australia you'd get shot for it. There was a matting developed by the Yanks before WW2 they used extensively for surfacing airstrips and taxi ways throughout the pacific. It was called Marston matting made out of steel and in places like New Guinea it's still surviving today. They could surface a 5000 ft runway in a couple of days so building roads of the stuff across well travelled tracks like these would be a simple matter and stop the idiots chewing up beaches. When the ferry ceases operation the matting could just as easily be picked up again leaving no evidence it was ever there.
I own a D40, that driver is the reason........sorry my bad. both are useless as each other. then a Tookra Range Rover drove bye.....too funny Shame to Nissan owner