Expedition Master III
- 10,785
- First Name
- Ethan
- Last Name
- Newago
- Member #
-
30968
- Service Branch
- US Army
Expedition Master III
30968
Inventor I
30139
Got to have a pot to piss in. Great setup.Some folks bring only the bare essentials to survive, some need a little more. What do you bring (or leave behind) that's unique to you?
I like to bring an extra tent for... meditation.
View attachment 267987View attachment 267988
View attachment 267989
Trail Blazer III
20527
Expedition Master III
30968
Pathfinder III
Off-Road Ranger III
20111
Advocate I
Off-Road Ranger I
0745
Builder III
31666
Off-Road Ranger I
0745
Hmmm, interesting, I think you are generally correct, ours is a 7,000 lb vehicle and a 1500 lb trailer- loaded and about 200 lbs under GVWR. I’ve seen quite a few overlanding vehicles way overloaded.I’d say “heavy” is reserved for the folks that have no idea they are 100s to 1000 lbs over the vehicles rated payload.
Expedition Master III
30968
It's actually snowing in my picture and the tent was to help block the wind as we were on a mountain top. Haha, I just thought it was a fun conversation starter!Light. But with a 1 ton, it hardly matters.
I ain't sitting in some hot stinky poo tent. If ya'll can't help but stare at my butt, that's your problem.
Off-Road Ranger I
0745
Well, I did use it to pull up some fence posts, and lift the corner of the barn up. But yea, 4 times on the trail or highway. 3 times with the trailer and once for the old heep. I’ve got two floor jacks in the barn for maintenance work. The old one is a 3 ton heavy old iron jack, the other a newer one rated at 4 ton.@MOAK 4 times in 25 years? I use it every time I rotate the tires and otherwise any time the truck comes off the ground. So much easier and faster than fighting with a floor or bottle jack, just throw that heavy sucker under the bumper and up she goes; then all you need is jack stands, and only when multiple wheels are coming off! Mine is some off brand; if I can break it, I'll buy a real Hi-Lift.
@HighVoltOverland I saw a thread once... "How do I increase my vehicle's GVWR?" ALL the bells and whistles went off and I was like, "You either buy a truck that can do what you want, or literally die trying." People can be astoundingly stupid when it comes to the physical properties of the materials these vehicles are made of, and how it destroys the suspensions and transmissions and bends the frame when you overload 'em. Try explaining "dynamic load", how tread pattern affects traction, etc. It's frightful how people operate a machine without the smallest idea of how it works.
you did fine...Haha, I just thought it was a fun conversation starter!