This is not nearly as scientific as INSAYN's test. But I have a pop up trailer I pull down on to the beach at Lake Mcconnaughy in Nebreaska. The first year I had 5.30 - 12 tires and it sliced into the sand and was like trying to pull an anchor across the beach. Upgraded to 175/80-13 (hugh I know, but 2 to 3 times wider) and it pulled much nicer across the sand. Granted not the same beach, but I could feel the difference.
Perhaps some of the difference we are talking about is the lighter big tired offroad trailers don't need to air down because they already have such low footprint pressure it doesn't matter, but in more conventional tired trailers it is more important.
I've driven on that same stretch of sand at Lake McConnaughy in my one ton diesel crew cab/camper combo. That sand is awesome stuff.
I went out there weighing in at ~11,500lbs for truck, camper, gear and family of 4 with the tire still at 80psi. Did fine until I stopped, I knew this would happen, but wanted to see how far I could press my luck.
Dropped the fronts down to ~30 psi, rears to ~35 psi and this was enough to pop up back on top of the sand to easily get back to the highway. This is where we stopped before airing down.
Fun lake, going back next summer to kayak fish for Walleye! Sorry for slight hijack. :sombrero:
